Giles and Batty shine as England are denied
England completed a highly satisfying warm-up match but couldn't quite polish off an obdurate tail, as the BCB President's XI reached the close on 143 for 9
The Wisden Bulletin by Andrew Miller
22-Jun-2005
Close Bangladesh Cricket Board Presidents XI 57 (Hoggard 6-13) and 143 for 9 drew with England 253 and 69 for 1 dec
Scorecard
Scorecard
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Ashley Giles: took 3 for 47 as England pressed for victory © Getty Images |
England completed a highly satisfying warm-up match - one that had seemed an
unlikely starter after the torrential rains that greeted their arrival - as
Gareth Batty and Ashley Giles picked up six wickets between them in their
first outing of the tour. They couldn't quite polish off an obdurate tail,
as the BCB President's XI reached the close on 143 for 9, but for England
the result mattered less than the practice.
For the young Bangladeshi side, however - eight of whom are members of the
U19 squad that will play in the World Cup here next March - survival was an
impressive accomplishment, albeit aided by the weather on the first day. It
had not seemed likely when seven wickets fell in rapid succession after tea,
but Nadif Chowdhury and Gazi Alamgir gritted their teeth to carry the match
into the final over of the day. A late twist seemed on the cards when Steve
Harmison yorked Chowdhury for 26 with two balls remaining, but Enamul Haque
held fast to deny England victory.
Such resistance was unexpected after the Bangladeshi efforts in the first
innings. They had teetered to 46 for 6 overnight, and England required just
six overs to wrap up proceedings for a paltry 57. Matthew Hoggard once again
displayed the sort of form that he had consistently shown in Pakistan and
Sri Lanka three winters ago. He added three more wickets to his overnight
haul, to finish with 6 for 13 from 9.3 overs.
In theory, the President's XI had avoided the follow-on by four runs, but
there would never have been any intention of enforcing it, especially after
England had lost four wickets for no runs on the second afternoon. Instead
it was left to two of those victims, Graham Thorpe and Rikki Clarke, to get
some much-needed time in the middle. Thorpe was in supreme touch for his 47,
but Clarke - whose place remains under threat from Paul Collingwood - was
less able to settle. He found the spinners particularly tricky to handle,
and when he was finally bowled by Enamul for 19, England declared on 69 for
1, and lunch was taken.
Martin Saggers made England's first breakthrough in the tenth over of the
resumption, when Chris Read pulled off a fine one-handed catch in front of
first slip to remove Nadif Iqbal for 20 (36 for 1). But Aftab Ahmed, very
much a candidate for next week's first Test, lead the resistance with a
sparkling 45 that included four fours and a mighty pulled six off Clarke.
But Clarke had his revenge in his very next over, when Aftab was trapped
lbw, and the innings frittered away. Hannan Sarkar's patient 16 soon came to
an end as Giles won his first lbw appeal of the day, and Batty entered the
attack from the opposite end to provide the final touch to England's
preparations.
The spinners wheeled away, with great accuracy but no spectacular turn, and
seven wickets tumbled for 37 as the inexperience of the Bangladeshis
threatened to be their undoing. But Chowdhury and Alamgir rallied the tail
to ensure that first blood in this tour has yet to be drawn.
Andrew Miller is assistant editor of Wisden Cricinfo. He will be accompanying England throughout their travels in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.