Prior leads fightback

–Wicketkeeper and Broad in record eighth wicket partnership after  Pakistan’s Riaz takes five wickets on test debut

LONDON, (Reuters) – Wicketkeeper Matt Prior dug  England out of deep trouble with an unbeaten 84 on the first day  of the third test yesterday as Pakistan reversed their  terrible form of the first two tests.   Fast bowler Wahab Riaz made a stunning test debut with five  for 63 as England were bowled out for 233 before the visitors  made a solid start in reply, reaching 48 for one at the close.

Prior added 119 for the eighth wicket with Stuart Broad  (48), an England record against Pakistan, after his team had  slumped to 94 for seven.

England lead 2-0 in the four-match series.

Riaz, a strongly built left-armer, proved an excellent  replacement for the injured Umar Gul when he was handed the ball  for the ninth over at the Pavilion End after England had won the  toss and elected to bat.

He accounted for Andrew Strauss (15), Jonathan Trott (12),  Kevin Pietersen (6), Eoin Morgan (17) and Broad, generating  menacing bounce from a powerful action.

Mohammad Asif was once again consistently dangerous with his  late movement through the air, taking three for 68.

Asif started England’s steep decline by dismissing the  woefully out-of-form Alastair Cook for six in his opening over  before wrapping up the tail.

Cook has now scored just 106 runs in his last eight test  innings.

Strauss, on two, survived an lbw shout by Asif to a delivery  which television replays indicated would have struck leg stump.

The England captain was then given not out against Riaz when  Pakistan appealed vociferously for a catch behind to Kamran  Akmal but the decision was reversed after an appeal to the third  umpire as the replay clearly showed Strauss had edged the ball.

INEFFECTUAL PIETERSEN

Pietersen, who has not scored a test century in 15 matches  since England’s tour of West Indies last year, scratched around  ineffectually for 62 minutes before he fell to the third of  Akmal’s four catches.

Akmal, recalled after injury to Zulqarnain Haider, conceded  two byes in the opening over but otherwise performed adequately.

Prior put the struggles of the England specialist batsmen  into perspective with an attractive, confident innings which  would probably have resulted in his second hundred of the series  had he not run out of partners.

He drove fluently through the off-side and worked the ball  skillfully off his legs to reach his half-century from 92 balls  with eight boundaries.

Broad played and missed outside the off-stump regularly to  the frustration of the Pakistan bowlers but also hit some  spanking drives and swept off-spinner Saeed Ajmal well.

With last man Steven Finn at the crease, Prior went for  broke, surviving the easiest of catching chances to Mohammad  Yousuf at cover on 83. Finn fell immediately afterwards to  Ajmal, the third lbw decision of the innings.

Prior finished with 10 boundaries from 129 deliveries in  more than three hours at the crease.

Yasir Hameed, one of four changes to the Pakistan team that  lost the second test by nine wickets, upper-cut Broad for six  over third man in an enterprising start as he reached 36 not out  at the close.

He lost his opening partner Imran Farhat, bowled by James  Anderson for 11 in the last over of the day.