Misbah terms England series 'biggest challenge', wants to wash spot-fixing stains
Pakistan Test Captain Misbah-ul-Haq has called on his team to gear up for the mighty task his team will undertake come Thursday.
Pakistan, who are preparing for their first Test series on English soil in six years, will take on the Alastair Cook-led England side in a four-Test match series.
Aware of the significance of a series win in England, Misbah asked his team to rise for "their biggest challenge in a long time" reported ESPNcricinfo.
After a spot-fixing marred Pakistan's tour of England in 2010, the two sides have contested twice in the longest format in last six years with Pakistan securing comprehensive series wins — 3-0 in 2012 and 2-0 in 2015 — in United Arab Emirates.
However, Misbah, Pakistan's most successful Test captain, termed a series win in England "the point they had to prove" to wash the six-year-old stains.
"This is the biggest challenge for us in a long time," Misbah said during the Investec Test series launch at Lord's Cricket Ground. "This is the best chance for us ─ and me as a captain ─ to perform here, especially in these conditions.
"To perform in England, Australia, even South Africa, these are the tours where you really develop your team.
The 2010 tour, I think, was a tough tour, but guys like Azhar Ali did well in tough conditions and situations, and that makes you a better player."
The 42-year-old stressed the need for batsmen to put up decent scores in order to give bowlers something to defend.
"If you can put good scores on the board, the Pakistan seam attack is good... we really have to stand up as a batting unit and give them good scores."
Pakistan's bowling attack is tagged as the best in the world and the national side's bowlers seem to have acclimatised to the English conditions well.
During Pakistan's first first-class contest on British shores, since 2010, earlier this week, fast-bowler Mohammad Amir and leg-spinner Yasir Shah, both making their returns after serving bans, looked in control.
The 24-year-old Amir bagged 4 wickets, whereas, the "best spinner", as Misbah referred to Shah during the interview, took 6 scalps.