Pakistan v England, 1st ODI, Abu Dhabi November 10, 2015

Improving Pakistan take on rejuvenated England

Match facts

November 11, 2015
Start time 3pm local (1100 GMT)

Big Picture

You have to zoom out a long way to get the wide angle on this series. England's newly professed love for one-day internationals is focused on winning more than just hearts when the Champions Trophy and World Cup roll around on home soil in 2017 and 2019. Pakistan narrowly avoided being squeezed out by Bangladesh at the Champions Trophy cut-off six weeks ago (West Indies were the team to miss out) and they are also at the start of a new cycle under the captaincy of Azhar Ali.

His tenure began with a first ever bilateral series loss against Bangladesh but Pakistan have since pulled out of their tailspin by beating Zimbabwe at home - amid emotions as heightened as the security - and away, as well as winning in Sri Lanka for the first time since 2006. New faces such as Mohammad Rizwan and Bilal Asif have made good impressions (and the latter has also had his action cleared), while the return of Younis Khan, so impressive against England in the Test series, gives Pakistan a wealth of experience to call upon.

Younis has not played since the World Cup but should win his 265th ODI cap, alongside Mohammad Hafeez (169 ODI appearances) and Shoaib Malik (227) in Pakistan's middle order. The only England player who comes close to those totals is the captain, Eoin Morgan, who has played 151 (of which 23 were for Ireland); Jos Buttler - who made his debut against Pakistan in the UAE three-and-a-half years ago - is next on the list with 61.

In some senses, though, this young England team have already gone to places their predecessors never did. England's first total of more than 400 was achieved during the summer, against New Zealand at Edgbaston, and their highest successful chase a few games later. Although a 3-2 defeat against Australia followed, Morgan will be intent upon consolidating the gains made, even if performances in this series are unlikely to have much of a bearing on the next two global 50-over tournaments (for reference, see England's 4-0 win in the UAE in 2012).

There are, of course, the rankings to bind all this together and, despite their improvements, sixth-placed England are actually being steadily reeled in by Bangladesh, in No. 7. Pakistan, a place below at No. 8, can't catch either yet but a win would help ease them away from West Indies in the race for an automatic spot at the 2019 World Cup.

Jos Buttler has been passed fit after a finger injury suffered in England's warm-up win over Hong Kong © Getty Images

Form guide

Pakistan: WLWLW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
England: LWWLL

In the spotlight

He has only scored one ODI hundred since 2008 and admits he is looking for the right moment to retire but that is all the more reason to marvel at Younis Khan's latest comeback. Younis criticised the decision to leave him out after the World Cup, though he clearly does not have the ambition of making it to England in 2019, and has said since his recall that he wants to "leave on my own terms and conditions". The evidence of the Test series, when he became Pakistan's record run-scorer, suggests that he is in good shape to take control of his destiny.

Morgan's health has been a source of concern since he suffered concussion in his previous appearance but, when it comes to the more prosaic business of playing form, Jos Buttler is the focus of attention. Rested midway through the ODI series against Australia, then dropped for the final Test against Pakistan, Buttler has endured the most difficult spell of his international career to date. It is less than six months since he scored a 66-ball ODI hundred against New Zealand (marginally slower than his England record) and the hope is a return to limited-overs colours will free him up.

Team news

The recall for Younis might force Rizwan out of the XI, despite a solid start to his international career, with Pakistan's main issue being how best to balance the side. Asif looks the prime candidate to support Yasir Shah in the spin department but Malik, fresh from Test retirement and career-best figures with the ball, filled that role in the warm-up against Nepal, allowing an for an extra batsman in Babar Azam. Azhar missed the final ODI of the tour of Zimbabwe with the toe injury that kept him out of the first two Tests against England but will resume at the top of the order.

Pakistan (probable): 1 Azhar Ali (capt), 2 Ahmed Shehzad, 3 Mohammad Hafeez, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Shoaib Malik, 6 Bilal Asif/Mohammad Rizwan/Babar Azam, 7 Sarfraz Ahmed (wk), 8 Anwar Ali, 9 Wahab Riaz, 10 Yasir Shah, 11 Mohammad Irfan

Morgan is set to play his first competitive match since being hit on the head by Mitchell Starc back in September. Buttler has been passed fit after suffering a finger injury in England's warm-up win over Hong Kong and will retake the gloves from Jonny Bairstow, while the absence of Ben Stokes - who hurt his collarbone during the third Test but would have sat out this series anyway - means James Taylor should stay in the XI despite Joe Root's return after he was rested against Australia. Liam Plunkett and Chris Jordan are the other pace-bowling options in the squad.

England (probable): 1 Jason Roy, 2 Alex Hales, 3 Joe Root, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 James Taylor, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Moeen Ali, 8 Chris Woakes, 9 Adil Rashid, 10 David Willey, 11 Reece Topley

Pitch and conditions

Both sides will be hoping for a livelier surface than that on which the Test took place, and last year New Zealand made scores of 299 for 5 and 275 for 4 batting first in Abu Dhabi - though fielding restrictions have been changed again since then. An afternoon start should mean cooler temperatures and the challenge of chasing under lights.

Stats and trivia

  • England have won seven of nine ODIs against Pakistan in the UAE
  • Of the 15 players who took part in England's series whitewash in 2012, only Morgan and Buttler remain (though Steven Finn would have been involved but for injury)
  • Shoaib Malik needs 10 runs to become the ninth Pakistani to score 6000 in ODIs

Quotes

"We'll try to dominate with the bat, especially the spinners who haven't bowled much in the subcontinent and UAE conditions."
Pakistan captain Azhar Ali sets out the gameplan

"White-ball cricket is something he prides himself on. In the last four years, he's been outstanding and has shown glimpses of world-class ability."
Eoin Morgan on Jos Buttler's search for form

Alan Gardner is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @alanroderick

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