Teenager Rehan Ahmed puts England on brink of memorable 3-0 Test series win in Pakistan

18-year-old Ahmed took 5 wickets for 48 runs and became the youngest player to claim a five-wicket haul on Test debut

Updated - December 20, 2022 06:07 pm IST

Published - December 19, 2022 07:03 pm IST - Karachi

Rehan Ahmed of England is congratulated on the wicket of Agha Salman of Pakistan during Day 3 of the third Test between Pakistan and England at Karachi National Stadium on December 19, 2022 in Karachi, Pakistan.

Rehan Ahmed of England is congratulated on the wicket of Agha Salman of Pakistan during Day 3 of the third Test between Pakistan and England at Karachi National Stadium on December 19, 2022 in Karachi, Pakistan. | Photo Credit: Getty Images

Legspinner Rehan Ahmed became the youngest men's Test cricketer to claim a five-wicket haul on his debut and put England on the brink of a historic 3-0 sweep in its first test tour to Pakistan in 17 years.

Pakistan's batters crumbled for 216 in the second innings of the third and final test as the 18-year-old Ahmed grabbed 5-48 and Jack Leach (3-72) claimed all three of his wickets in the space of six deliveries on Day 3 to leave England a modest target of 167 runs.

Ben Duckett (50 not out) and Zak Crawley (41) motored England to 112-2 by stumps with their aggressive “Bazball” brand of batting — named after their coach Brendon McCullum.

England needs a further 55 runs to register its second successive win inside four days following its thrilling 26-run victory at Multan last week. England won the first Test by 74 runs in dimming light on the last day on a flat wicket in Rawalpindi.

Rehan Ahmed of England signs a honours board to commemorate his 5 wickets, after becoming the youngest debutant in men’s Test history to take a five-for during Day 3 of the third Test between Pakistan and England at Karachi National Stadium on December 19, 2022 in Karachi, Pakistan.

Rehan Ahmed of England signs a honours board to commemorate his 5 wickets, after becoming the youngest debutant in men’s Test history to take a five-for during Day 3 of the third Test between Pakistan and England at Karachi National Stadium on December 19, 2022 in Karachi, Pakistan. | Photo Credit: Getty Images

Crawley and Duckett plundered 87 runs off 69 balls before mystery spinner Abrar Ahmed grabbed two late wickets. Crawley was adjudged leg before wicket while attempting a sweep and Rehan Ahmed (10), promoted up the order, smacked two boundaries before he swiped and got clean bowled.

Harry Brook's third successive century had given England a 50-run first innings lead when it replied with 354 after dismissing Pakistan for 304, with Ahmed and Leach sharing six wickets between them.

Pakistan, staring at its first ever 3-0 whitewash at home, lost the last seven wickets for 52 runs in the second innings as Ahmed stifled the middle-order with his sharp googlies and legspin.

Captain Babar Azam (54) hit his third half century in the last four innings and Saud Shakeel (53) made his fourth fifty in his debut series before Ahmed left the lower order clueless on a wicket which has a variable bounce and slow turn from Day 1.

Babar and Shakeel had rebuilt Pakistan's hopes with a 110-run stand before both fell late in the second session to Ahmed.

Babar became the fourth test player to complete 1,000 runs this year, but played an overambitious pull against Ahmed's short ball soon after completing his half century and Ollie Pope held a sharp catch at short mid-wicket.

Ahmed, who also became the youngest England test debutant at the age of 18 years, 126 days, then picked up the wickets of Mohammad Rizwan (7) and Shakeel in successive overs to seize complete control as Pakistan reached 177/6 at tea.

Shakeel followed up his three previous half centuries in his maiden test series with another defiant fifty before he top-edged a sweep against Ahmed and was caught by Leach at square leg.

Babar and Shakeel had defied spin and pace for 2 hours, 45 minutes after Leach's triple strike had reduced Pakistan to 54/3.

Pakistan was ahead by just three runs when the top order crashed against Leach on a wicket where spinners have dominated.

Former captain Azhar Ali had a disappointing end to his 97-Test career as the 37-year-old fell without scoring in his last innings when Leach knocked back his off stump with a sharp turning delivery.

England players applauded and shook hands with Azhar before he took the final guard with his wife and two sons among a sparse crowd at the National Stadium.

But Azhar lasted for only four balls against his former Somerset teammate Leach before the England players again shook hands with him for one last time.

Azhar was accorded a guard of honor by his teammates on the edge of the boundary line as he slowly walked back into the dressing room.

Resuming on 21/0, Shan Masood (24) started promisingly, smashing Joe Root for three boundaries and a six before the offspinner was taken out of the attack after two overs.

Abdullah Shafique wiped off the 50-run deficit with a pulled boundary against Mark Wood's 140 kph bouncer before Leach struck thrice without conceding a run.

The left-handed Masood was bowled playing an extravagant reverse sweep as the ball clipped the bottom edge of his bat before hitting leg stump.

Four balls later, Leach sent Azhar packing and then pinned Shafique (26) plumb lbw on the front foot to leave Pakistan on the mat.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.