Seventeen years later, England make their return to Pakistan

Hales recall may mark start of new era for England, as Pakistan look to bounce back from Asia Cup

Andrew Miller19-Sep-2022Big pictureSeventeen long years ago, in the cold of a misty December night, England’s cricketers made their way off the field at Rawalpindi after a consolation victory in the fifth and final ODI. It was the final act of a tour in which little had gone right for England in either red- or white-ball format, not least for their all-conquering 2005 Ashes team, which had collapsed to a 2-0 defeat earlier in the month, to mark the beginning of the end of Michael Vaughan’s reign.Even amid the heightened post-9/11 security that that trip had entailed, however, few could have imagined that England’s next visit would be put in abeyance for the best part of two decades. The sides have met on neutral soil in the UAE for three tours in the intervening years, most recently in 2015, but for many years – particularly after the events outside the Gaddafi Stadium in March 2009 – a return to actual cricket on Pakistani soil seemed inconceivable.Related

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Slowly but surely, however, the groundwork has been laid – first through the path-finding efforts of the Pakistan Super League, which was founded in exile in the UAE in 2016 before holding its knockouts and final on home soil the following year: the start of an inexorable process of myth-busting, not least for the numerous England white-ball players in this current squad who have long since been persuaded of the country’s warmth and hospitality.In fact, it was telling – even before a ball had been bowled in this series – quite how cordial the relations are between the England and Pakistan players on show. Footage shared by the PCB on Monday showed the likes of Alex Hales and Shan Masood bantering about the English summer just gone, while Mohammad Haris – a probable debutant behind the stumps – coyly introduced himself to Jos Buttler as the two squads mingled freely.Previous tours might have been tinged by suspicion at best and open hostility at worst, thanks to the legacy of mistrust that had existed between the two teams down the years, from rows about umpiring and ball-tampering in the 1980s and 1990s, through the spot-fixing crisis of 2010 and beyond.