The Sun (Malaysia)

Slow start worry

England have lost the first Test in eight of their last 10 series

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ENGLAND know another sluggish start to a Test campaign could prove costly as they go in search of a first series win over Pakistan in a decade. Today sees a three-match contest get underway with the first Test at Old Trafford.

And while England can point to recent series victories over most of their rivals, their last such success against Pakistan was back in 2010.

That campaign, however, was overshadow­ed by a “spot-fixing” scandal at Lord’s which led to bans and jail terms for then Pakistan captain Salman Butt as well as pacemen Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir.

England have lost the first Test in eight of their last 10 series – including during last month’s 2-1 win over the West Indies that marked internatio­nal cricket’s return from the coronaviru­s lockdown.

It is a statistic they are all well aware of, with in-form England pacemen Chris Woakes admitting: “I’d love to be able to put my finger on it and I’m sure the management and the team would as well.

“It’s not coincidenc­e but it’s almost, it is just a coincidenc­e that we can keep losing that first

Test match.

“But we want to put that right,” he added, with the eyes of the global cricket community set to turn to Manchester in the absence of any other major internatio­nal fixtures outside of England amid the pandemic.

Both of Pakistan’s past two series in England – 2016 and 2018 – ended in draws, which should encourage the tourists this time even though they go into the first Test on the back of just a couple of intra-squad warm-up fixtures compared to their ‘match-hardened’ hosts.

“We’ve had good preparatio­ns and team bonding,” said Pakistan coach Misbah-ul-Haq yesterday.

“Still we feel there is always a slight nervousnes­s when you just play Test cricket after a long, long time (away),” he added ahead of his side’s first Test in six months.

Misbah accepted that how his batsmen coped with James Anderson and Stuart Broad would go a long way to determinin­g the outcome of the series.

The West Indies failed to post a single individual century in their recent series. Pakistan will hope the likes of Abid Ali, the first man to score a hundred on both Test and one-day internatio­nal debut, Shan Masood, Azhar Ali, Babar Asam and Asad Shafiq can provide the runs they need.

Meanwhile England must decide whether to stick with four quicks in their XI after Ben Stokes couldn’t bowl in the West Indies decider because of a quad injury.

The star all-rounder was, however, reported to have bowled with good pace in the nets on Monday. – AFP

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