Pakistan’s Test chief, Shan Masood, uncovered the group’s procedure for the main Test against Bangladesh, beginning August 21 in Rawalpindi. The crew has settled on a four-man pace assault, lining up with anticipated conditions at the scene.
During a pre-match public interview on Tuesday, Shan made sense of the rationale behind this determination. He noticed that Rawalpindi’s circumstances generally favor seamers and hitters, with turn assuming a lesser part.
“In Rawalpindi, at whatever point we have played homegrown cricket, the circumstances have leaned toward the seamers and the hitters. Turn bowling hasn’t been a major danger. Along these lines, we need to take what we do in homegrown cricket forward as opposed to applying a genuinely new thing, which we don’t regularly get in Rawalpindi,” said Shan.
At the point when gotten some information about the choice to choose Mohammad Ali over Mir Hamza, Shan underscored the particular job every bowler plays.
“Assuming that you thoroughly search in detachment, you can quarrel over why this specific bowler was liked over another,” Shan made sense of. “We thought about who could best help Shaheen Afridi and Naseem Shah, who will ideally take the new ball tomorrow. We accept Mohammad Ali is appropriate for this job. He raises a ruckus around town hard, can move the ball in the air with the crease, and has that additional speed. It’s really not necessary to focus on one bowler being superior to another, yet rather about who fits the circumstances best,” he finished up.
Pakistan’s playing XI:
Shan Masood (chief), Saud Shakeel (bad habit skipper), Abdullah Shafique, Babar Azam, Khurram Shehzad, Mohammad Ali, Mohammad Rizwan (wicketkeeper), Naseem Shah, Saim Ayub, Salman Ali Agha, Shaheen Shah Afridi.