Opener Zak Crawley said on Friday that England’s young pace attack will face a “test of character” in their upcoming Test series in Pakistan where a pitch baked by searing temperatures and surging smog levels await.
The team touched down this week in the central city of Multan, which will host the first two of a three-match Test series starting on Monday.
With training underway, temperatures are 37 degrees Celsius (99 degrees Fahrenheit) and air pollution is up to 27 times the level deemed safe by the World Health Organisation, according to monitoring firm IQAir.
“It will be challenging, but we have got all the things in place to counter that,” said Crawley, returning to the squad after missing a home series against Sri Lanka with a fractured finger.
“We are looking forward to that challenge,” the 26-year-old told reporters in Multan. “We have been talking about it for the last couple of weeks.”
He predicted England’s quintet of pace bowlers - on their maiden tours of Pakistan - would particularly face a “test of character and test of skill”.
With experienced pace duo James Anderson and Stuart Broad now retired, the baton of pace bowling is with Brydon Carse, Matthew Potts, Gus Atkinson, Olly Stone and Chris Woakes.
“These young guys have got a lot of skill,” said Crawley. “Being young brings in energy and fire in the belly as well, and I am sure they will be raring to go and do well.”
Pakistan’s international cricket performance is in dire straits, and the red-ball team has lost all five matches during the tenure of skipper Shan Masood which began last year.
Last month they suffered a humiliating first-ever 2-0 home series defeat to low-ranked Bangladesh.
Crawley is one of the eight players on England’s Test squad who also played in the team beating Pakistan 3-0 in 2022, inflicting on them their first whitewash at home.
“I think we will put pressure on the opponents, like the last time,” said Crawley, citing England’s aggressive “Bazball” tactics, dubbed after the nickname of head coach Brendon McCullum. “The finger is good and I have recovered well,” Crawley said about his recovery from injury. “I am absolutely raring to go. I can’t wait.”
Meanwhile England are likely to announce its starting XI two days before the first Test, as is their usual practice. Crawley hinted that a final decision on Stokes’ inclusion may not be made until closer to the match.
“He seems to be going well, recovering well from his injury,” he said. “We don’t know just yet. I think he’s got to do a few more tests, but he’s been doing some running and stuff.”
England held their first practice session in Multan, the site of the opening two Tests of the three-match series, on Friday after arriving early Wednesday morning. They’ve opted to skip warm-up matches ahead of the first Test, but Crawley expressed his readiness to play, feeling refreshed and energized despite a ten-week layoff. However, he won’t be fielding in the slips.
“The finger is all right,” Crawley said. “It’s as good as it could be at this stage. I’ve recovered well from it. It was a nasty break at the time, but I’ve recovered well and I don’t feel it at all while I’m batting. In the field, I haven’t done too much. I’m trying to rest it, but I did a few catches there (in training) and it feels fine.
“I won’t go at slip, just from advice from the doctor. I feel like I could, but I’m just trying to follow the professional advice. It feels back to normal now, so I’m looking forward to cracking on... I feel brand new. I’m looking forward to getting out there. I’ve certainly missed it, so I can’t wait to get out there again with the boys.”
The second Test starts in Multan on October 15 with the final match played in Rawalpindi from October 24.
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