England dismiss Ayub but Pakistan reach 173-3 at tea in second Test in Multan

Published October 15, 2024 Updated October 15, 2024 03:48pm
Pakistan’s Saim Ayub walks back to the pavilion after losing his wicket, caught out by England’s Ben Stokes off the bowling of Matthew Potts on October 15. — Reuters
Pakistan’s Saim Ayub walks back to the pavilion after losing his wicket, caught out by England’s Ben Stokes off the bowling of Matthew Potts on October 15. — Reuters
Pakistan’s Kamran Ghulam (R) plays a shot as England’s wicketkeeper Jamie Smith looks on during the first day of the second Test cricket match between Pakistan and England at the Multan Cricket Stadium in Multan on October 15. — AFP
Pakistan’s Kamran Ghulam (R) plays a shot as England’s wicketkeeper Jamie Smith looks on during the first day of the second Test cricket match between Pakistan and England at the Multan Cricket Stadium in Multan on October 15. — AFP
Pakistan’s Shan Masood plays a shot during the first day of the second Test cricket match between Pakistan and England at the Multan Cricket Stadium in Multan on October 15. — AFP
Pakistan’s Shan Masood plays a shot during the first day of the second Test cricket match between Pakistan and England at the Multan Cricket Stadium in Multan on October 15. — AFP

England fast bowler Matthew Potts removed opener Saim Ayub after a half-century before Pakistan reached 173-3 at tea on the opening day of the second Test in Multan on Tuesday.

Ayub and debutant Kamran Ghulam had lifted Pakistan from a precarious 19-2 with a third-wicket stand of 149 on a used pitch that assisted the spinners.

At the break, Ghulam was unbeaten on 75 while Saud Shakeel was four not out.

The left-handed Ayub scored a career-best 77 studded with seven boundaries before he miscued a push off Potts’s penultimate over before tea and was caught by captain Ben Stokes at short mid-off position.

Ghulam, who replaced Babar Azam in one of four changes from Pakistan’s innings defeat in the first Test, also in Multan, has so far hit five fours and a six.

Ayub and Ghulam lifted Pakistan to 79-2 at lunch, after England’s Jack Leach took two early wickets on a used pitch offering help to the spinners.

Ayub was unbeaten on 40 and debutant Ghulam 29 not out as the pair steadied Pakistan from 19-2 after the home team won the toss and opted to bat in Multan.

Returning England captain Ben Stokes turned to his spinners after just five overs on the same pitch used for the first Test last week and Leach soon struck.

Abdullah Shafique was bowled by Leach for seven in the eighth over of the morning with the score on 15.

In his next over, the left-arm spinner had captain Shan Masood caught low at short midwicket by Zak Crawley for three.

At lunch, Leach had 2-35 from 10 overs.

Pakistan won the toss and decided to bat Tuesday in the second Test against England in Multan.

England lead the three-match series 1-0 after an innings and 47-run victory in the first Test, played at the same venue.

The defeat — Pakistan’s sixth in as many Tests — prompted their selectors to drop ace batsman Babar Azam.

Also left out were pace bowlers Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah, plus spinner Abrar Ahmed, who had been hospitalised with fever during the first Test.

Batsman Kamran Ghulam will make his debut in place of Azam.

Pakistan opted for three spinners in their attack in the shape of Sajid Khan, Zahid Mahmood and Noman Ali with only one pace bowler, Aamer Jamal.

England captain Ben Stokes returns from a hamstring injury and fast bowler Matthew Potts comes into the side, with Gus Atkinson and Chris Woakes left out from the first Test.

The third and final Test begins on October 24 in Rawalpindi.

Pakistan: Shan Masood (captain), Saim Ayub, Abdullah Shafique, Kamran Ghulam, Saud Shakeel, Mohammad Rizwan, Salman Agha, Aamer Jamal, Noman Ali, Sajid Khan, Zahid Mahmood

England: Ben Stokes (captain), Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith, Brydon Carse, Matthew Potts, Jack Leach, Shoaib Bashir Umpires: Kumar Dharmasena (SRI), Chris Gaffaney (NZL) TV umpire: Sharfuddoula Saikat (BAN) Match referee: Richie Richardson (WIS)

Opinion

Editorial

Conciliatory approach
Updated 15 Oct, 2024

Conciliatory approach

Pakistan can only move forward when disillusioned segments of society are given their constitutional rights.
PCB mess
15 Oct, 2024

PCB mess

PAKISTAN cricket is in a state of turmoil — all the way from the boardroom to the field. Several decisions have...
Police brutality
15 Oct, 2024

Police brutality

IS our police leadership so devoid of ideas that cracking down on unarmed civilians is their only means of ...
SCO summit
Updated 14 Oct, 2024

SCO summit

All quarters, including political parties, must ensure that no hurdles are placed in the way of the SCO summit.
Not the answer
14 Oct, 2024

Not the answer

THE recent report from Justice Project Pakistan shows how urgently Pakistan needs to rethink its use of the death...
Foul killing
14 Oct, 2024

Foul killing

THE chasm between the powerful and the vulnerable, coupled with radicalisation within law enforcement, has turned...