Cricket, like fate, has a cruel sense of irony. Having conquered India 1-0 earlier in the summer, England returned to Lord’s only to find themselves unravelling at every turn. The omens were ominous from the outset: they lost their captain and coach to a courtroom battle, their key players to injury, the tosses that mattered most, and ultimately, their grip on the game. By the final afternoon, their fate was sealed in a dramatic collapse—nine wickets lost for just 75 runs in barely two hours.
Bad luck? Perhaps. But to dwell on England’s misfortunes would be to deny Pakistan the full credit they deserved. This was a masterclass in resilience, fast bowling, and opportunism. Inzamam-ul-Haq played an innings worthy of the highest honours—his fifth and most commanding Test century—but the match belonged to Waqar Younis, whose lethal reverse swing yielded a magnificent eight-wicket haul.
The Early Signs of Trouble
England’s problems had begun even before the match. Nasser Hussain, the hero of the Trent Bridge Test, had fractured his finger, while Chris Lewis nursed a thigh strain. Both were retained in the squad but withdrew after unconvincing net sessions. This forced England to turn to Nick Knight, returning from his own injury, and Simon Brown, Durham’s left-arm swing bowler, earning a well-deserved debut after 56 first-class wickets in a struggling side.
If England hoped Pakistan’s top order would gift them a dream start, they were briefly indulged. Brown struck with just his tenth ball in Test cricket, trapping Aamir Sohail leg-before as he padded up. Dominic Cork, now a veteran of 13 months in international cricket, produced a moment of brilliance, uprooting Ijaz Ahmed’s middle stump. At 12 for two, Pakistan’s promising start threatened to crumble.
But then came Inzamam. The elegant right-hander, so often a symbol of Pakistan’s unflappable confidence, rebuilt the innings alongside Saeed Anwar. They added 130 crucial runs, and though England found a breakthrough when Anwar edged an attempted cut off Graeme Hick, the real moment of fortune came—and slipped through their fingers. Had it been Inzamam rather than Salim Malik who was run out when both batsmen ended up at the same end, the match could have swung England’s way. Instead, Inzamam lived on, doubled his score from 64 to 148, and played an innings that embodied both precision and audacity. A lofted on-drive off Hick for six brought up his century in style. His 218-ball effort, laced with 19 boundaries, propelled Pakistan to a respectable but still underwhelming 290 for nine.
Yet Pakistan had one final twist in store. The last-wicket stand between Rashid Latif and Ata-ur-Rehman added 50 invaluable runs—extra runs that tilted the balance of the match. It was the beginning of a pattern: every time England seemed to find a foothold, Pakistan pried it from them.
A Harsh Examination Under Lights and Leather
Michael Atherton, weary from an extra hour in the field, lasted barely 20 minutes at the crease before succumbing to a controversial lbw decision against Wasim Akram. In a match already rife with questionable umpiring calls, this was another that fueled debate. Umpire Peter Willey, standing in his first home Test, added to the confusion by awarding Nick Knight two additional runs during the tea interval, transforming what had been signalled as leg-byes into an edge that pushed him to a half-century.
But no amount of scoring adjustments could shield England from Waqar Younis and Mushtaq Ahmed. This was the toughest challenge England’s batters had faced all summer—Waqar’s reverse swing at its most wicked, Mushtaq’s teasing leg-breaks probing every vulnerability. England needed a hero, and Graham Thorpe tried to be one, his skill and determination kept the hosts in the fight. Yet his failure to convert another fifty into three figures—his 17th half-century in Tests without a century—proved costly. Playing back to Rehman, his slightly crooked bat sent a lifting delivery crashing onto the stumps. With his dismissal, England lost their last five wickets for just 25 runs.
A deficit of 55 may not have seemed insurmountable, but Pakistan’s second innings ensured it would be.
The Final Blow
If there was a moment when England’s hopes of a comeback flickered, it came in the form of three quick wickets under fading light. Pakistan, at one stage coasting at 136 for none thanks to Anwar and debutant Shadab Kabir, suddenly found themselves reeling. Shadab, a teenager deputizing as opener due to Sohail’s wrist injury, had played with diligence. Anwar, in contrast, had powered into the eighties before edging Alan Mullally behind. England saw their opening, but once again, Pakistan denied them. Ijaz Ahmed and Inzamam consolidated before Wasim Akram provided the final flourish, unleashing a whirlwind cameo before declaring on the fourth afternoon.
Eight hours remained for England to survive. They lasted just 27 minutes before Waqar struck again, trapping Knight lbw. Atherton and Alec Stewart battled through to the close, then withstood the morning’s first session, giving England the slimmest glimmer of hope.
But Pakistan, as they had so often done before, knew that one breakthrough could spark an avalanche. Mushtaq Ahmed provided it, switching to round the wicket and coaxing Atherton into an edge to slip while playing against the spin. The door was ajar—Pakistan kicked it open.
Stewart gloved Mushtaq to slip. Ealham was bowled behind his legs. Thorpe fell victim to another contentious lbw decision. At the other end, Waqar continued his reign of destruction—Hick’s nightmare summer worsened as he was bowled for the second time in the match. Russell’s resistance ended with an outside edge, and Cork was beaten for pace.
Spin and swing had combined masterfully.
By the time Wasim Akram delivered the final blow—Ian Salisbury edging a mistimed pull—England’s capitulation was complete. It was, as Atherton conceded, not the pitch, nor the ball, nor the umpiring that had decided this contest. It was Pakistan’s sheer brilliance.
They had simply been outplayed.
Thank You
Faisal Caesar

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