England double century star Crawley in ‘dream’ world
Southampton , United Kingdom (AFP) — Zak Crawley said he “couldn’t have dreamed for a better score” after converting his maiden Test hundred into a superb innings of 267 against Pakistan at Southampton yesterday before England great James Anderson rocked the tourists with a late treble strike.
Crawley and Jos Buttler, who made 152, shared a stand of 359 that powered England to 583-8 declared on the second day of the third Test.
England, 1-0 up in a three-match contest and looking for a first series win over Pakistan in a decade, then saw Anderson reduce the tourists to 24-3 at the close—a deficit of 559 runs —as he moved to within four of becoming the first paceman to take 600 wickets in Tests.
“I couldn’t have dreamed for a better score, I’m absolutely delighted and we’re in a very good position with Jimmy at the end there,” Crawley told Sky Sports.
Pakistan’s Shan Masood was plumb lbw for four to Anderson before fellow opener Abid Ali (one) edged low to Dom Sibley at third slip.
And with what became the last ball of the day, Anderson had star batsman Babar Azam lbw for 11 with one that cut back to finish with stumps figures of 3-13 in 5.5 overs.
Fighting Pakistan
Pakistan batsman Fawad Alam, however, insisted that “we don’t think the match has finished”.
“We will fight it out and if we get two big innings everything will change. It’s cricket and we are a fighting unit that can do that.”
England’s total was their highest in Tests since they made 589-8 declared against Pakistan at Old Trafford four years ago.
Three of Pakistan’s front line bowlers conceded over 100 runs each, with leg-spinner Yasir Shah (2-173 from 39 overs) and teenage paceman Naseem Shah (1-109 in 27) both going for more than four an over.
Crawley’s innings was the seventh highest maiden hundred in 143 years of Test-match cricket and the 10th highest score by any England batsman.
“It’s very humbling indeed, I don’t see myself anywhere near their calibre but hopefully I can build on this,” said Crawley.
Flawless Buttler
His partnership with Buttler was also a new England fifth-wicket record in Tests, surpassing the 254 shared by Keith Fletcher and Tony Greig against India at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai in February 1973.
“Jos was exactly the right man at the other end, telling me to calm down,” said Crawley. “He played better than me today, he was flawless.”
One of the few false shots of his innings saw Crawley go to 200 when he edged a four past second slip off Naseem.
But he still received applause from his teammates in a match being played behind closed doors because of the COVID-19 outbreak.