Leach, Ahmed shine for England on a spinners' day in third Pakistan Test

England's Rehan Ahmed, center, celebrates with teammates after taking the wicket of Pakistan's Saud Shakeel during the first day of third test cricket match between England and Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan, on December 17, 2022. (AP)
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Updated 17 December 2022
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Leach, Ahmed shine for England on a spinners' day in third Pakistan Test

  • Leach grabbed 4-140, Ahmed finished 2-89 as Pakistan batters spoiled good starts
  • Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope were at the crease as the visitors trail by 297 runs

KARACHI: Spinners Jack Leach and teenager Rehan Ahmed shared six wickets between them as England dismissed Pakistan for 304 Saturday on the opening day of the third and final Test in Karachi. 

Leach grabbed 4-140 and Ahmed finished with 2-89 as Pakistan batters spoiled good starts after Babar Azam won the toss and batted on a turning National Stadium pitch. 

But England also fell prey to spin, with mystery tweaker Abrar Ahmed trapping Zak Crawley without scoring before the visitors closed the day on 7-1. 

Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope were at the crease with four and three respectively as England trail by 297 runs. 

England lead the three-match series 2-0 after winning the first Test by 74 runs in Rawalpindi and the second in Multan by 26 runs. 

Skipper Azam top-scored for Pakistan with 78 before running himself out in the post-tea session, while Agha Salman made 56. 

But the start of the day belonged to Ahmed -- who at 18 years and 126 days old became the youngest England player to start a Test -- when he dismissed Saud Shakeel for 23 in his seventh over. 

Before Ahmed, Brian Close was the youngest England debutant at 18 years and 149 days when he played against New Zealand in 1949. 

Leach then came into the act, breaking a stubborn eighth wicket stand of 48 between Salman and Nauman Ali (20). 




Pakistan's Azhar Ali, left, plays a shot as England's Ben Foakes watches during the first day of third test cricket match between England and Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2022. (AP)

In the morning session, Pakistan lost Abdullah Shafique (eight), Shan Masood (30) and Azhar Ali (40) before Azam and Shakeel looked to have steadied the innings with a 45-run fourth wicket stand. 

But Ahmed had Shakeel caught off a defensive shot at short-leg before Azam was adjudged run out by wicketkeeper Ben Foakes after a lengthy review. 

Azam, who hit nine boundaries, also added 71 for the third wicket with Azhar. 

Azhar -- playing his last Test -- fell at the stroke of lunch when he gloved a catch to a diving Foakes off pacer Ollie Robinson. 

Sensing the pitch would take spin, England started the attack with Leach, who trapped Shafique leg-before in the sixth over of the day. 

Leach becomes the first spinner to open the attack in a Test for England in 101 years -- Jack White did the same against Australia at Leeds in 1921. 

Masood fell to the trap of short bowling as he pulled fast bowler Mark Wood straight into the hands of deep fine-leg fielder Leach. 

Masood hit five boundaries while Azhar had six hits to the ropes. 

Under pressure to avoid their first-ever 3-0 whitewash at home, Pakistan made four changes from the second-Test line-up while England made two, bringing in Foakes and Ahmed. 


Mancini’s Al-Sadd advance in Asian Champions League despite defeat

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Mancini’s Al-Sadd advance in Asian Champions League despite defeat

  • Al-Sadd will take on table-toppers Al-Hilal over two legs in early March in the ⁠next round
  • “Today was a very difficult game,” said Al-Sadd goal scorer Rafa Mujica

DOHA: Roberto Mancini’s Al-Sadd suffered a 4-1 thrashing at the hands of Saudi Pro League champions Al-Ittihad in the Asian Champions League Elite in Doha on Tuesday but the Qatari club still scraped through to the last 16 of the continental championship.
A 2-0 loss for Al-Sadd’s compatriots Al-Gharafa against Iranian outfit Tractor FC meant Mancini’s side clung on to eighth place in the western league phase standings to claim a spot in the knockout rounds.
Al-Sadd will take on table-toppers Al-Hilal over two legs in early March in the ⁠next round while ⁠Al-Ittihad, who finished fourth in the standings, face off against Al-Wahda from the United Arab Emirates.
Defending champions Al-Ahli, also from Saudi Arabia, will play Al-Duhail from Qatar with Tractor meeting UAE’s Shabab Al-Ahli.
“Today was a very difficult game,” said Al-Sadd goal scorer Rafa Mujica. “The first 20, ⁠25 minutes were very bad for us. We conceded everything.
“But we only have to think about the next game. We are qualified. We will see in the next game.”
Mancini’s team needed to match or better the result recorded by Al-Gharafa but went two goals behind inside the opening 18 minutes when Houssem Aouar and Youssef En-Nesyri struck for the visitors.
A Pedro Miguel own goal in the 33rd minute compounded Al-Sadd’s problems although Mujica gave Al-Sadd a ⁠glimmer of ⁠hope seven minutes before the interval.
Stephan Keller restored Al-Ittihad’s three-goal cushion when he scored with a close range finish in the 63rd minute as the Saudi side notched up their second comfortable win in a row.
Al-Gharafa’s hopes were erased, however, when their Iranian visitors scored twice in the final 30 minutes to knock Pedro Martins’ team out of the competition.
Mehdi Hashemnejad netted after the Al-Gharafa defense failed to clear in the 61st minute and Amirhossein Hosseinzadeh’s deflected effort into the top corner put the result beyond doubt with nine minutes remaining.