England are in a spin in more ways than one as
they head into the second Test against Pakistan at Old Trafford on
Friday (July 22), looking to level the four-match series at 1-1.
Alastair Cook's men suffered a 75-run defeat inside four days in last
week's first Test at Lord's, with Pakistan's legspinner Yasir Shah
taking 10 wickets.
Now England will hope to play Shah
better at Old Trafford, where the pitch is likely to offer more turn.
They also have to decide whether to give a home debut to legspinner Adil
Rashid, either in support of, or as a replacement for, Moeen Ali.
Incidentally, England have now called in Saqlain Mushtaq, former
Pakistan off-spinner, as a coaching consultant for the Old Trafford
Test. While they will hope he can advise Ali and Rashid, his greatest
short-term benefit may lie in tips about how to play spin.
England
have been without a specialist spin coach since Mushtaq Ahmed, former
Pakistan legspinner, now in the tourists' camp, returned home in 2014.
Having picked a 14-man squad, England could field two spinners,
especially as both all-time leading wicket-taker James Anderson
(shoulder) and all-rounder Ben Stokes (knee) have been passed fit after
they each missed the first Test.
Anderson is due to return on his Lancashire home ground amid suggestions that Cook and coach Trevor Bayliss were happy to accept his assurances that he was fit for Lord's, only for the pair to be over-ruled by the selectors. Meanwhile, Stokes was looking forward to working with Saqlain, who took four for 74 when Pakistan beat England by 108 runs in the second Test at Old Trafford in 2001.
"You've got to use the knowledge of the people you're lucky enough to have come in and work with you," said Stokes. "It would be silly if the batsmen didn't try to get anything out of him, pick his brains and ask how the guys who were successful against him played."
So keen are England to
play 'positive' cricket that several batsmen gave their wickets away at
Lord's. Stokes hinted at a more refined approach by saying: "Old
Trafford is known to spin, and obviously that's going to favour Shah.
"So
we might have to change where you have to think 'I can do this but no, I
can't do that', if it's spinning and bouncing. It will just be working
out a gameplan in terms of how to score, but not giving your wicket
away," he said.
As England, who also have
question marks over top-order batsman James Vince, ponder their options,
it looks as if Pakistan will field the same side, although openers
Mohammad Hafeez and Shan Masood may be looking over their shoulders
after poor returns at Lord's.
Having come through all the hype surrounding Mohammad Amir's return to Test cricket for the first time since his 2010 spot-fixing crime at Lord's, they gave fans at the 'home of cricket' much else to talk about last week.
Misbah-ul-Haq marked his first Test at Lord's with a fine hundred which saw the 42-year-old perform a series of press-ups in celebration. The captain's gesture in thanking military staff for the squad's pre-tour boot camp was echoed by the team after Amir had sealed victory by bowling last man Jake Ball.
Having come through all the hype surrounding Mohammad Amir's return to Test cricket for the first time since his 2010 spot-fixing crime at Lord's, they gave fans at the 'home of cricket' much else to talk about last week.
Misbah-ul-Haq marked his first Test at Lord's with a fine hundred which saw the 42-year-old perform a series of press-ups in celebration. The captain's gesture in thanking military staff for the squad's pre-tour boot camp was echoed by the team after Amir had sealed victory by bowling last man Jake Ball.

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