Morgan’s maiden test ton puts England in charge

NOTTINGHAM, England, (Reuters) – England’s Eoin  Morgan plundered 125 not out for his maiden test century to help  dig his team out of trouble and steer them to 331 for four at  stumps on day one of the first test with Pakistan yesterday.

Left-hander Morgan — who reached three figures with a six  — came to the crease at 118 for four and added 213 with Paul  Collingwood, who was 81 not out at the close at Trent Bridge.

Mohammad Aamer had earlier claimed three wickets and was the  only bowler to pose a regular threat, finishing the day with  three for 39 from 19 overs.

“It was definitely my greatest highlight,” Morgan told  reporters. “It is a massive moment in my career. I’m extremely  satisfied to score a test match hundred in only my third game.

“I was pleased that I allowed myself a chance to get in  under difficult circumstances when the ball was swinging. We  have ourselves a great platform and took advantage later on.”

Morgan’s innings may have cemented his name in the reckoning  for the Ashes tour in November and served to illustrate the  growing strength of England’s middle order, with the injured Ian  Bell to come back.

It also helped justify Andrew Strauss’s decision to bat  after winning the toss in overcast weather that eventually gave  way to sunshine.

Pakistan, seeking to avenge their 3-0 series loss in England  in 2006, started well with four early wickets but glaring errors  by wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal as well as some wayward bowling  meant they could not capitalise.

“I just see it as a tough day at the office,” Pakistan’s  Umar Amin said. “We did our best and were in a very good  position with England on 118 for four but we could not get  wickets at crucial times. Tomorrow will be a new day.”

Pakistan also suffered from the Decision Review System  (DRS), which was employed in England for the first time.

The tourists incorrectly challenged two umpiring decisions  to lose their two allocated reviews while England had two  successful reviews and lost one.

While Morgan’s enterprising 182-ball innings, which  comprised 18 fours and one six, was chanceless, Collingwood  struggled for fluency but battled through.

He survived one chance when he should have been stumped on  48 when beaten by a ripping leg-break from Danish Kaneria, but  keeper Akmal fumbled the ball.

Akmal, who struggled with his glovework on the 2006 tour of  England and also dropped several chances in Australia in  December-January, dropped a simple chance off Strauss when the  England opener had scored 15. Strauss went on to make 45.

Morgan was at his best before tea, when he was particularly  aggressive against the spinners Kaneria and Shoaib Malik,  striking six boundaries in 12 balls at one stage.

One such boundary was a reverse sweep to third man off  Kaneria, a shot he has become renowned for in one-day cricket.

His 17th four, stroked gracefully through cover off Mohammad  Asif, was perhaps his most elegant, and it raised England’s 300.  Former Ireland player Morgan is playing in just his third test.

Earlier, Aamer claimed three of the first four wickets by  having Alastair Cook (8) caught at first slip and Strauss caught  behind to a short and wide ball.

After Asif bowled a rusty-looking Kevin Pietersen for nine  off the inside edge, Aamer trapped Jonathan Trott lbw having  played no shot. Trott unsuccessfully challenged his dismissal.

Pakistan’s two referrals were lost in the space of two Asif  overs after Pietersen was given not out by Sri Lanka umpire  Asoka de Silva, first lbw and then caught behind.

Scoreboard

England first innings
A. Strauss c Kamran Akmal b Mohammad Aamer          45
A. Cook c Imran Farhat b Mohammad Aamer                    8
J. Trott lbw b Mohammad Aamer                                          38
K. Pietersen b Mohammad Asif                                                 9
P. Collingwood not out                                                               81
E. Morgan not out                                                                      125
Extras: (b-5, lb-8, w-5, nb-7)                                                  25
Total (four wickets; 90 overs)                                              331
Fall of wickets: 1-42 2-93 3-116 4-118
Still to bat: M.Prior, G.Swann, S.Broad, J.Anderson, S.Finn.
Bowling: Aamer 19-4-39-3 (1w), Asif 20-6-65-1, Gul 16-4-58-0  (2nb), Kaneria 21-0-100-0 (2nb), Malik 11-2-39-0, Ali 1-0-9-0,  Amin 1-0-3-0, Farhat 1-0-5-0.
Pakistan: Salman Butt (captain), Imran Farhat, Azhar Ali,  Umar Amin, Umar Akmal, Shoaib Malik, Kamran Akmal, Mohammad  Aamer, Umar Gul, Danish Kaneria, Mohammad Asif.