Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Coach confident Pakistan will be better for England rout at World Cup

Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur insisted his side would benefit from a 4-0 one-day series defeat by World Cup hosts England when the showpiece tournament starts later this month.

England, the world's top-ranked ODI side, triumphed by 54 runs in Sunday's finale at Headingley as, not for the first time this series, Pakistan's bowling and especially their fielding let them down.


Yet the match was the first time in a completed innings this campaign where Pakistan, bowled out for 297, had failed to post a total of 340 or more.

But Sunday's game did see Babar Azam follow up his 115 at Trent Bridge on Friday with 80, while captain Sarfraz Ahmed made 97 before being run out in unusual fashion by wicket-keeper Jos Buttler.

Arthur insisted he was in a much better mood now than he had been after Pakistan suffered a humiliating 124 run-opening defeat on the Duckworth/Lewis method by India in Birmingham at the 2017 Champions Trophy -- an ODI tournament they bounced back to win by defeating their arch-rivals in the final.

"We were beaten hands down at Edgbaston that day and I didn't really know where to turn because there wasn't a hell of a lot of positives out of that day," said Arthur.

"We sit here having taken a huge amount of positives out of this series.

"I thought our batting has gone to another level.

"People, coming to England, said we were a 280 team. We've dispelled that, that's given our batting unit a massive amount of confidence in the dressing room."

- 'We'll be ready' -

Moreover, Arthur was adamant the series against World Cup favourites England would help Pakistan.

"The other thing is we've played against a team who are number one in the world in their own conditions.

"I know there's not too many teams who will arrive in England as prepared as we are in terms of the competition we've played against and match-fitness," explained Arthur, previously a coach of both his native South Africa and Australia.

"All I know is the players are very determined to do well. Every time they go out there they play for 210 million people.

"We'll be ready -- come the first game against the West Indies, we'll be ready.

"I'm as confident we'll do well as I've ever been."

Meanwhile, Arthur said left-arm quick Mohammad Amir, recently sidelined with chicken pox, could yet make it into Pakistan's final 15-man squad for the World Cup.

"Mohammad Amir trained yesterday (Saturday). He had 25 minutes on a bike and a gym session. He had another one today so if selected he'd be ready to go.

"In terms of selection, Inzi (Pakistan selection chief Inzamam-ul-Haq) and I will talk tomorrow (Monday) to finalise our squad.

"We've got until May 23 to get our team in."

Pakistan's fielding looked to be improving when they were in England last year.

This latest series, however, saw Pakistan drop routine catches and give away runs with sloppy outfielding.

"It's been very disappointing," said Arthur, who insisted the decline in standards was not down to former Australia wicket-keeper Steve Rixon quitting as Pakistan's fielding coach in September over a pay dispute.

"That's a real worry for me because we are putting a hell of a lot of effort into it and there's not a massive amount of reward there at the moment.

"We'll just keep knocking away at it though.

"Fielding is about attitude and wanting to get out there and get it done.

"They (the players) know they've been short in this department and they are not happy about it. They are working damn hard at it."

More For You

Energy

Ofgem said wholesale prices were currently stable and had fallen by 4 per cent over the past three months

Getty Images

Energy bills set to rise in January despite price fall predictions

Highlights

  • Energy bills will rise by £3 annually from January, with households paying an extra 28p per month during winter.
  • Electricity costs are climbing 5.1per cent while gas prices fall 5.7 per cent, hitting hardest those switching to electric heating.
  • Government policy costs, not wholesale prices, are driving the increase, with further rises expected in April.
The energy price cap will rise by 0.2 per cent in the three months to March, adding £3 to typical annual dual fuel bills, which will reach £1,758. For the average household, this translates to an additional 28p per month during winter months.

The surprise increase defied expert predictions. Consultants at Cornwall Insight had forecast a 1 per cent price drop due to stable wholesale markets and lower gas prices over the past three months. However, rising government policy costs including funds for the Warm Homes Discount scheme and electricity network investment pushed the cap higher.

Ofgem said wholesale prices were currently stable and had fallen by 4 per cent over the past three months, but conditions remained "volatile".

Keep ReadingShow less