• International edition
  • Australia edition
  • Europe edition

Imran Khan

The Joy of Six: England v Pakistan

Half a dozen of the most memorable meetings between England and Pakistan, including the 1992 World Cup final

1) England in Pakistan (1969)

In 1964, South Africa were banned from competing in the Olympics and football’s World Cup; by 1968, following the D’Oliveira affair, English cricket was cajoled into conceding that apartheid was bad, and their winter tour to South Africa was cancelled. Instead the team were sent to Pakistan, where they were neither especially happy to be, nor especially welcome.

At the time of their arrival, Ayub Khan – a military dictator who became President in a coup d’état – was in trouble. All sections of society were agitating all over the country even before England arrived in Karachi; when they did, they found a dusk-till-dawn curfew. But the various wise men felt in their wisdom that the tour should continue, on the basis that it might calm things down – because, of course, sport is renowned for dampening heightened emotion. Matches were shortened to four days as a sop to the players, which did nothing to stop them serving as muster points for protestors.

Before the first Test, Lahore was beset by student demonstrations, so in the hope of quietening things Aftab Gul was picked. Earlier that year, he had become the first player to appear in a first-class game while out on bail for suspected political offences; more recently, in his capacity as a lawyer, he represented Salman Butt at the start of the spot-fixing case.

An even contest ended in a draw, after which the teams proceeded to Dhaka, then the capital of East Pakistan. Originally, the second Test was cancelled, but it was then decided that this might increase the unrest. So, England arrived to discover army and police stationed on the outskirts of the city, with rioters free to go about their business through the rest of it. Venturing a desire to go home, they were warned that their coach “would not reach the airport.”

To appease the locals this time, Pakistan selected Niaz Ahmed, an East Pakistani club-level cricketer, and perennial twelfth man. The implication was of a path to selection; the reality was that neither the government nor cricket board did anything to promote the game in the area. Another draw followed.

During the third Test at Karachi, the threat of a general strike prompted the suggestion that England might march to the ground behind the black flag of mourning – but Les Ames, the tour manager, was having no such thing. “We’ll not carry any flag, black or white,” he said. If anyone tries to prevent us getting there that will be it: we just won’t be there.”

At the start of day three, England, having won the toss and batted, were 502-7, with Alan Knott four runs shy of a maiden Test century. But then a large group stormed a gate and made for the middle, protesting not just at the political situation but Hanif Mohammad’s removal as captain. Among those trying to repel them was Tom Graveney, swiping with his bat – “They weren’t very hard, but I think they were my only decent strokes up until then,” he later said.

The batsmen raced off the pitch and the whole team hightailed it to the airport, getting themselves home that very night; little more than two weeks later, Ayub was gone. DH

2) Pakistan in England (1987)

The Pakistan cricket team encapsulate everything that is wonderful about sport. Obviously they’ve got all the boring stuff like talent, genius and skill, but at elite level that’s almost commonplace; what’s special about them is their commitment to attitude, which is why no other team scales such heights of self-destruction and self-realisation, nor performs them with such elan. And regardless of who they’re addressing – umpires, opponents, team-mates, themselves – the message is always the glorious same: up yours.

And other than India, it is England they enjoy telling most of all (apart, from, perhaps and depending, Australia, New Zealand, West Indies, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe). This was particularly so during the 80s; it started in 1982, with the first of various umpiring controversies, and then in 1984, Ian Botham described Pakistan as “the kind of place to send your mother-in-law”. It was not well received.

So when the tourists arrived in England in the summer of 1987, they were ready for a ruck, and tauba tauba , did they have the team for it, containing, amongst others, Javed Miandad, Imran Khan, Saleem Yousuf and Abdul Qadir. Things were away before there had even been any cricket, with a request that the TCCB remove David Constant from the umpiring panel, on account of the 1982 aggravation – his terrible mistake probably cost Pakistan the series. The request was refused but news of it leaked to the press, and Constant offered to stand down following a controversial decision and subsequent row in the first Test.

That aside, not much happened – play was curtailed by rain, and in the second Test too, with schoolchildren across the land flummoxed by England’s two centurions, RT ‘Tim’ Robinson and CWJ ‘Bill’ Athey.

The next match at Headingley was notable for the debut of the New Botham™, David Capel, though such were the riches of all-round options that he soon gave way to Chris Lewis, Dermot Reeve, Craig White, Darren Gough, Dominic Cork, Mike Watkinson, Ronnie Irani, Mark Ealham, Adam Hollioake and Ben Hollioake.

But in his first Test innings, Capel top-scored with 53 out of just 136; Pakistan did not need to be asked twice. Every batsman bar one made double figures and Saleem Malik caressed his way to 99 , while Neil Foster took arguably the hollowest eight-fer of all-time . England began their second innings 217 runs behind, Imran Khan took 7-40 , and Pakistan won by an innings and 18 runs.

Imran Khan

At Edgbaston, the Test pootled along on a flat track – its first innings yielded a combined total of 960 – until the afternoon session of the final day when Foster and Botham suddenly ripped through Pakistan’s middle order. This set England a target of 124 to win from 18 overs, but the bowling of Imran and Wasim left them 15 runs short. Naturally, there were accusations of time-wasting; naturally, they were accurate. “Part and parcel of the international game,” chortled Pakistan’s tour manager and joker, Haseeb Ahsan.

So in order to salvage a series draw, England needed to win the final Test at the Oval. The atmosphere was intensified by the return of Constant, and Haseeb informed the press that his side would find it hard to focus. Spirited discussions ensued when he turned down an appeal for a catch behind, prompting Haseeb to call him a “disgraceful person”, but by then it made little difference. Pakistan had already won the toss, batted, and taken sadistic, life-affirming joy in grinding England into the gristle. In their total of 708 all out – because why declare? – Mudassar Nazar scored 76, Malik 102, Khan 118, Ijaz Ahmed 69 and Yousuf 62, but the chief humiliator was Miandad, whose 260 lasted 617 minutes and 521 balls . By the end of it, Pakistan’s first series win in England was secure, a tribute to the power of up yours. DH

3) Pakistan in England (1992)

By June 1992, David Shepherd had long been a top-class international umpire. Five years previously he had been awarded an MBE for services to cricket and was well on the way to being one of the most celebrated in the modern game. His affable nature, sound judgement and little quirks (lifting one foot off the ground whenever the score reached a multiple of 111, or tying a matchstick to his finger on any Friday 13th for good luck, ensuring he was always touching wood) endeared him to players and fans alike, and in light of the increasingly tempestuous relationship between Pakistan and England, it made him an ideal candidate to officiate the third Test of Pakistan’s tour of England in 1992.

The other umpire was Roy Palmer, another West Country man and a first-class umpire since 1979, but who was making his Test debut at Old Trafford. Palmer was not the only debutant that day: Tim Munton was given his first England Test cap but failed to make any real impression with the ball – managing just one wicket for 112 as Pakistan eased to 505-9dec from their first innings. Munton, though, would make a key contribution at No10, crucially helping England to avoid the follow on alongside Ian Salisbury before Wasim Akram did for the latter. With the game heading for a draw, Devon Malcolm came in to face Akram, Waqar Younis and Aaqib Javed, who had skilfully guided Pakistan to World Cup glory over England just a few months earlier.

“Tim wasn’t a very good batter and Devon was even worse,” Palmer told the North Devon Journal in 2012. “He had bowled some bouncers at the Pakistan batsmen but Javed Miandad could handle it, Devon Malcolm couldn’t handle bouncers.”

This, at least, is correct. The first bit of short stuff thrown down by Javed hit Malcolm square on the helmet. A better batsman would have swerved the chest high delivery, but Malcolm, clumsily crouching his 6ft2in frame, couldn’t. Palmer, with all the authority of a fishmonger in a butchers, ticked off Javed with a bit of finger wagging. This only served to enrage the Pakistan team, with captain Javed Miandad also objecting, arguing that his bowler was perfectly entitled to bowl one bouncer per over. The next ball, the same thing happened, the only difference being Malcolm managing to avoid being hit again. This time, it was Palmer who seemed enraged, calling a no-ball and marching down the wicket and appearing to issue an official warning. Javed was unmoved, and threw down some more chin music with his final delivery. The over finished, Palmer strode off to square leg shaking his head, seemingly relieved to have the whole business done with.

But it was what happened next that relighted the embers. “His sweater was in a loop on my coat and when I pulled it wouldn’t come out,” said Palmer, who eventually managed to free the item of clothing and offered it to Javed, along with his hat. “When I put them together and passed them to him he knocked the sweater to the floor and said I had thrown it.”

All hell broke loose. Five different Pakistani players confronted Palmer, Miandad and Javed the most animated, and a supporter even broke onto the field wielding a rolled-up newspaper before he was halted by two security guards in the outfield. Palmer did nothing but cross his arms, and stand there silently, “retaining the dignity of a patient policeman watching a family squabble,” according to Wisden.

At stumps, Palmer was given a police escort off the field, and Aaqib was fined half of his match fee (about £300) with Pakistan’s team manager Intikhab Alam also severely reprimanded for complaining to the press that Palmer had thrown the jumper at his bowler. Intikhab refused to apologise and repeated his remarks, and was fined by the ICC.

Palmer would umpire just one more Test, England’s third Ashes Test at Trent Bridge a year later, where more apparel-based controversy reigned. “Shane Warne had bowled [Mark Lathwell] a googly and he padded up and I gave it not out,” Palmer explained. “Warne went absolutely bonkers. He snatched his hat out of my hand and I wasn’t very happy with that. I thought, ‘When he comes back on and asks me to hold his hat I shall tell him where to stick it’.

“David Shepherd was a good umpire, nothing seemed to fluster him, he handled things nicely, not like myself – players could get my back up.” MB

4) England in Pakistan (1987)

When England returned to Pakistan in December 1987, the teams had – to their credit – managed to squeeze in more broiges during the World Cup. Javed Miandad, of famously delicate countenance, claimed to have been sworn at by Mike Gatting, responding to a conciliatory pat on the back with a shove to the face .

The first Test was in Lahore, where England were whacked and bad umpiring reignited the sides’ mutual antipathy. In Pakistan’s first innings, Abdul Qadir was given out stumped despite being well in his ground, and then when England batted, Gatting was adjudged lbw second ball , the umpire sending him on his way with a finger that looked more like the finger, raised almost before the ball hit the pad. “Rather hasty,” said BBC News; “you get slightly upset,” said Gatting.

More beef followed in the second dig. Chris Broad refused to leave the crease when given out caught behind – Pakistan later pressed for him to be sent home, but he escaped with a reprimand – while Graham Gooch was dismissed similarly after blatantly glancing at the ball as it passed his bat .

But it was during the second Test in Faisalabad that things really heated up. Before it begun, England protested the appointment of Shakoor Rana as umpire – “not one to avoid a quarrel if he can help it,” wrote John Woodcock in the Times of a man who even managed to fall out with the amazingly affable Jeremy Coney. Rana and Gatting had already had words during the one-day series, when England refused a request for a specialist wicket-keeping substitute, but Pakistan were happy with him and things escalated from there.

After winning the toss and batting, England soon lost Gooch, his pad to the keeper visible even through grainy footage and serving to further excite his captain. So, while Broad made a hundred, a steam-powered Gatting thrashed 79 off 81 balls, though England were still dismissed for a below-par 292.

On day two, England felt they had Ijaz Ahmed caught, and when Rana determined otherwise, Bill Athey detained the batsman in conversation, earning himself a ticking-off. In classic Sunday League style, a vexed Gatting then spoke about the umpire rather than to him, but loudly enough so that he could hear. “One rule for one, one rule for another,” he said.

Captain Mike Gatting had much to ponder during England’s 1987 tour of Pakistan.

Then, three deliveries from the close with Pakistan struggling at 106-5, Gatting moved David Capel up on the one from long leg – after informing the batsman. So Eddie Hemmings sidled in and Gatting signalled that Capel should stop, whereupon Rana stopped play to chastise what he deemed to be underhand behaviour. In response, he was advised that he was acting outside of his pay grade , after which further sentiments were duly exchanged. “The language employed throughout the discourse was basic,” said Wisden; “you’re a fucking cheating cunt” said Rana; and fingers were jabbed menacingly before play ended early for the day.

The next morning, Rana refused to continue without receipt of a written apology – of course, he knew this was unlikely, just as he knew that Pakistan were both one–up in the series and ill-placed in the match. This had not escaped Botham, who noted that Pakistan had done less than expected in the World Cup, when umpires were neutral.

But the problem was not solely one of umpiring. “Many believe that some white cricketers have a condescending attitude to touring in the Third World”, reported Wesley Kerr of ITN; the Muslim Chronicle’s Haroon Jadhakhan termed it a “colonial hangover”.

Eventually the Foreign Office got involved and Gatting was forced to apologise, though a further day’s play was lost, which Pakistan refused to make up. It probably cost England victory.

The third and final Test was drawn too, and at the end of the series, the TCCB topped up the fee they paid their players on account of all the grief. But shortly afterwards, Gatting was sacked as captain, officially for his liaison with a barmaid, but more likely for his liaison with Rana.

“It still rankles,” he said in 2010 . “But in some ways it was good for cricket because neutral umpires came in immediately after that episode.” DH

5) World Cup final (1992 )

The 1992 cricket World Cup represents the zenith of the human project. The right length, the right size and the right structure, it was also the first to include South Africa, the first to be played in coloured clothing and the first to have its own velvet-rock theme tune ; this wasn’t just Oz , it was Oz .

Neil Fairbrother’s ferreting ferried England into the final, while Pakistan were propelled by Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis and Mushtaq Ahmed – and, through the semi-final, by Inzamam-ul-Haq, a relative unknown picked by Imran Khan specially for the competition.

For those of youthful and northern-hemisphere persuasion, the game was compromised by the school day; the Joy of Six found itself in an end-of-term maths exam with headphones down its sleeve, coughing out developments to a class of uninterested ignorami; 28%, now that you ask.

In front of more than 87,000 people at the MCG, Pakistan won the toss and batted, but Derek Pringle soon removed both openers. In the group game between the sides, they were skittled for 74, but in Khan and Miandad had two of the most beautifully bellicose, belligerent buggers ever to exist.

Typically, they set about doing nothing in the most confrontational, ominous manner imaginable; at the halfway point of the innings, the total was just 70. But gradually, they lifted the rate, Miandad playing through pain to sneak his usual selection of ones and twos, even with a runner; together they put on 139, which, buttressed by a thrash from Inzamam and Wasim, set England a testing but gettable 249.

But Pakistan held the advantage of momentum, almost unstoppable when paired with genius. So Wasim quickly removed Ian Botham for a duck – dubiously . “Who’s coming in next? Your mother-in-law?” asked Aamer Sohail. Aaqib Javed then did for Alec Stewart, and when Mushtaq got rid of Graham Gooch and Graeme Hick, England were 69/4 and very nearly gone.

Again, though, Neil Fairbrother brought them back into it, building a partnership of 72 with Allan Lamb, which forced Khan to bring back Wasim sooner than planned; oh, calamity! So, in he charged, haaled up to eyeballs , to offer Lamb one which jagged in then straightened and Lewis one which merely jagged in . The result was two wickets in two balls, not so much clean as filthily bowled, and the game was almost over. Then Aaqib got Fairbrother, the tail was cleaned up, and Pakistan were world champions and England were not. DH

6) World Cup group stage (2003)

There is something in our nature that keeps us obsessed with the biggest, the strongest, the fastest. It is the reason why there is a blue whale hanging in the Natural History Museum. It is the reason why football managers are still interested in signing Peter Crouch, even at the age of 35. Shoaib Akhtar’s 100.02mph (161.3km/h) delivery – the fastest ball on record – to England’s Nick Knight in a 2003 World Cup group stage match remains one of the most fascinating moments in cricket, not because it resulted in any great sporting moment but because it resulted in a human one, of how far a body could be pushed and stretched.

In the context of the match, it didn’t mean anything – Knight ably flicking the ball to square leg for a single – England went on to win the match comfortably by 112 runs, No11 Shaoib top scoring for Pakistan with 43. The footage is grainy and lasts just a split second, and even the commentators that day didn’t realise what had happened until the speedometer was projected on the big screen and a cheer erupted from the crowd.

There are plenty of other more exciting things – good and bad – that Shaoib could instead be remembered for: clean bowling Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar in 1999 in Kolkata with two successive yorkers; ball-tampering, performance-enhancing drugs, whacking his team-mate Mohammad Asif with a bat in the Pakistan dressing room, bringing the England order down to earth in December 2005 after their famous Ashes triumph with a combination of frightening pace and a devilish slower ball, missing the 2009 World Twenty20 in England due to a case of genital viral warts . Shaoib himself described his career in his autobiography as “a series of embarrassing incidents strung together by me telling people about those embarrassing incidents.” Indeed, Shaoib’s greatest battles did not come against England, India or any other side, but with himself. How far could he push himself? On that day in 2003, he went further than anybody had ever gone before, or since.

“I wanted to do it. I said that before the match to my coach and manager that I was going to do it in my second over,” Shaoib remarked during the interval that day. “When I saw the 158 (km/h), I said, okay this is the time, just cross the barrier, finish it for the rest of my life”. MB

  • The joy of six
  • England cricket team
  • Pakistan cricket team

Comments (…)

Most viewed.

pakistan tour of england 1992

  • Photo Features
  • Talking Cricket
  • Stats Features
  • Balls of the Century
  • I Was There
  • The Greatest ODIs

The Cricket Monthly

We'll take Kennington: the two Ws hold up the silverware after the win in the fifth Test

The forgotten invincibles

In the summer of 1992, England hosted one of the greatest touring sides the country has seen

I n their first Test series in England , in 1954, a gruelling tour that lasted over four months and took in 30 first-class matches, Pakistan became the first team to win a Test on their debut visit to the country. For a side with nearly no experience of playing in English conditions, Pakistan's results were a pleasant surprise - they won nine matches in all and lost only three. Their performance won them many accolades, with Wisden noting: "The players were also splendid ambassadors. Rarely has a more popular set of cricketers toured anywhere, and wherever they went, they made a host of friends by their modest charm and obvious eagerness to learn."

Thirty-eight years later there came a vastly different but also successful tour . The 1992 touring Pakistanis were not freshmen seeking validation from former colonial rulers. They swaggered into the country, brash, abrasive and in your face, and world champions. For Pakistan, the result was a momentous, generation-defining tour; here were the gasp-inducing collapses, the reverse swing of Wasim and Waqar , the supporting legspin of Mushtaq Ahmed ; this was the tour that gave Pakistan the nucleus of its #TheMighty90s side, a golden generation.

Yet when we think of the great touring sides to England, this 1992 Pakistan side does not immediately spring to mind. It is easy to recall a number of Australian sides - the Invincibles of 1948, or the champions of 1989 and 1993, the latter the board from which sprang Shane Warne; even the several vintages of West Indian visitors through the 1980s. You'll be hard-pressed to find much celebration of the 1992 tourists. A book written about the tour was by Pakistan's media manager on the trip, Khalid Mahmood, published four years later and more concerned with responding to ball-tampering allegations. Those, and other controversies, in fact, are partly why the achievement is not celebrated as much as others. "In terms of cricket, a great summer but one not recalled with fondness," as Martin Williamson, a former ESPNcricinfo journalist, explained.

S tatistically, it can be said without any embellishment or exaggeration that the tour was one of the most successful by any visiting team to England. It was as gruelling, if not more so, than that inaugural tour - Pakistan played 36 matches of one kind or another in a stay that ended three days shy of four months.

pakistan tour of england 1992

Given the depth of talent in that squad, the Test series was probably closer than Pakistan would have liked it to be, but they tore through the county circuit like few sides before them. Of the 12 first-class matches they played against county sides, they won nine; the only game they lost was their first one, against Worcestershire, who would win the County Championship that season. It was the best record against county sides since Bradman's 1948 team won 15 out of 20.

Four Pakistani batsmen - Saleem Malik , Asif Mujtaba , Aamer Sohail and Ramiz Raja - scored over 1000 runs on the tour; Javed Miandad made over 800, and Shoaib Mohammad and Inzamam-ul-Haq, on his first tour to England, scored more than 700. Wasim Akram, arguably the best pace bowler in the world at the time, took 82 wickets in 14 matches, despite a stress fracture of the shin early on. Waqar, returning from a six-month absence, was saved mostly for the Tests, but Aaqib Javed and Mushtaq Ahmed took 36 and 66 wickets respectively.

Above all the margin of their wins was testament to their quality. They won most matches in two to two-and-a-half days at a time when county matches were still three-day affairs). Four of their wins against the counties were by seven wickets or more; twice they won by more than 200 runs, once by 107 runs, and once by an innings. In ten of the 14 first-class matches they played outside the Tests (12 against the counties, one against Oxford and Cambridge Universities, and one against a World XI), Pakistan scored at 3.5 runs or more per over. In seven of those, they went at more than 4 per over. "County after county was overwhelmed by cricket which was all aggression and excited appealing and vitality, not safety-conscious, fearful of failure, and content with a draw, in the English manner," noted Wisden , not without a little envy perhaps.

The net result was that Pakistan became the only team to win the short-lived Tetley Bitter Challenge - a lucrative £50,000 jackpot on offer at the time to touring sides. Tetley had launched the challenge in 1990, when New Zealand toured - that summer the deal was that the tourists would win the prize money only if they beat all the county sides. The idea, according to Tim Lamb, secretary of the English board at the time, was to reinvest some meaning in the side games.

Grudge match-up: Miandad b Botham in the second ODI, at The Oval

Grudge match-up: Miandad b Botham in the second ODI, at The Oval Adrian Murrell / © Getty Images

Until the early 1980s tour matches were a financial high point for counties, especially if Australia were the visitors. Williamson recalls around 10,000 watching the 1981 Australians at Lord's before Botham's Ashes caught fire. Middlesex fielded 11 Test players, including Jeff Thomson. By the end of the decade, however, the gloss had worn off and too often counties, with an eye on the championship, ended up fielding weakened XIs.

Lamb explained to the Cricket Monthly that it was necessary to provide the counties with an "incentive", which meant it was only fair they offered similar prize money to the touring teams. As an example, in 1992, a county could earn £4000 for beating the Pakistanis, while they earned a paltry £250 for a win in the Championship. "In 1991 it was tweaked so West Indies only had to win a proportion of games, and by the time Pakistan visited in 1992, the format was that they would win £50,000 if they won eight of the 12 tour matches, and also pocket £2500 for each tour match they won," Williamson recalled. By way of comparison, in the five-Test series, the winner of each Test earned £8000, while in the five-ODI series the winner of each game earned £5250.

The tweak to eight wins, according to Lamb, was to make the jackpot a more "realistic" target. "It was not unreasonable but was attainable, as the Pakistanis demonstrated," Lamb said. "Of course £50,000 in those days was a hell of a lot of money. In that era county cricketers, and I'm sure the Pakistani players, were not paid a great deal of money compared to football, tennis and golf.

"That was really the rationale behind it: to add extra resonance to the county matches against the tourists, to motivate the counties to put down stronger teams for the benefit of the England team, and in order to be fair and balanced to provide a jackpot prize fund to the touring team, which the Pakistanis succeeded in winning. It was fantastic."

The brewery benefited from the publicity. Cornhill Insurance was the Test series sponsor and long embedded in the English game. Tetley wanted to stand out as the England team sponsor without trespassing on Cornhill's sponsorship. Lamb and his team came up with an "elegant balance", an idea that was "out of the ordinary" but did not "alienate" Cornhill.

"Fifty-thousand pounds in cricketing terms was a lot of money and therefore [Tetley] gained a lot of good PR and publicity out of making that money available. I don't think it mattered to them who the money went to. It was just the fact that they were able to be associated with this new idea, this comparatively large amount of money in the context of cricket at the time. And it was an important element in their sponsorship deal."

T he jackpot, as Miandad acknowledged, united the tourists like little else, which says something given how fractious Pakistan sides of that generation would become; so much so, Miandad remembers the "unity" on that tour was unlike any other he had experienced.

Dean Jones was part of the Durham side that lost to Pakistan by 107 runs , among the closer contests. They took a first-innings lead, declaring only four wickets down, and still lost. "I recall the prize money," Jones recalled to the Cricket Monthly , "because Javed Miandad told me, 'Why are you playing? We need to win this game. It means a lot to us.' I told him I had to play as it was my last game. He said, 'Good luck, we've got a good bowling team.' I reminded him it was the same bowling team I had scored runs against."

Pakistan win at Lord's: Javed Miandad remembers the team's unity on the tour being stronger than it was at any other time in that era

Pakistan win at Lord's: Javed Miandad remembers the team's unity on the tour being stronger than it was at any other time in that era © Getty Images

Jones at least won the personal battle, scoring a hundred in each innings. "If you made the mistake with Wasim or Waqar or Mushy, you did not get a second chance. And that is what happened that season."

The games came thick and fast, with little downtime, and it allowed Pakistan to get into the zone. A number of the squad were familiar with the county circuit. Miandad had had a long association with Glamorgan and Sussex; Malik had blossomed at Essex; Akram, Waqar and Aaqib played for Lancashire, Surrey and Hampshire respectively, and Waqar had already been one of Wisden 's cricketers of the year. Others, such as Shoaib and Mujtaba, had played in English leagues. The squad was also a fine blend of experience and youth. A number of them had played Under-19 cricket together. Between the oldest and youngest were players such as Akram and Malik, who were neither too senior nor too fresh.

There was also the understanding that this was a rare, exceptionally talented crop, among the finest produced by Pakistan. "Why do you still remember the Pakistan team from '90s?" Waqar recalled to the Cricket Monthly . "We were all match-winners in that squad and we had supreme confidence and self-belief in our ability that we will win. And during that England tour, we stumbled upon the magic formula which made our team near unbeatable."

For the duration of the tour, the squad played with a rare, inexplicable kind of energy, a self-confidence that gave them an aura of invincibility. Michael Jeh, a former first-class player who writes for ESPNcricinfo, came across the Pakistanis while playing for Oxford and Cambridge Universities . He found them to be almost Australian in their on-field behaviour.

"They behaved like world champs," Jeh remembered. "Moin Khan was unbelievably abrasive. I remember going in late on day one to bat and they thought I was Indian and said nothing to me. The next morning they discovered I was an Aussie and they got stuck into me big time. I remember asking Moin when was the last time the Australian RAF bombed Pakistan, because they were nice to me when they thought I was Indian but turned feral when they found out I was Aussie!

"Sheer pace, prodigious swing and legspin, they had it all. Whatever the conditions were, they could deal in that currency. You got the feeling that confidence was sky high and that they were buoyed by the fanatical Pakistan expat support in Britain."

O n August 3, Pakistan won the jackpot with their eighth win against a county side in 11 matches - with a match to spare, in other words. The acting captain, Malik, and Mujtaba put on a swift 86-run stand to break the chase of 193 and Pakistan got home in 34.1 overs. The pattern was by now familiar: the county side would stay abreast on first innings but then get blown away as the game moved to the second innings. Less than a week later Pakistan clinched the Test series as well, at The Oval . The Tetley challenge continued for a few more years but no other team ever came close to matching Pakistan's accomplishments.

Sweatergate: Aaqib Javed and Javed Miandad after Aaqib's tugging match with umpire Roy Palmer (second from left) during a changeover at the Old Trafford Test

Sweatergate: Aaqib Javed and Javed Miandad after Aaqib's tugging match with umpire Roy Palmer (second from left) during a changeover at the Old Trafford Test Patrick Eagar/Popperfoto / © Getty Images

The sheen was taken off that showing by the friction on the tour. Part of it was just the combustible history between the two sides - the last time they played, after all, Mike Gatting and Shakoor Rana had come together to produce one of cricket's most infamous photos . The captain, Miandad, was someone the English press wasn't particularly enamoured with, in stark contrast to his predecessor Imran Khan. The tone was set when Miandad and Botham engaged in a verbal scuffle in the second ODI, less than a month into the tour. The tiff unleashed a torrent of obnoxious tabloid articles targeting Miandad. In the Daily Mirror , Mike Langley compared Miandad to Gaddafi, and described him as "a wild man with a face you might spot crouched behind rocks in an ambush along Khyber". The political columnist Simon Heffer famously described Pakistan as the "Pariahs of cricket" in the Sunday Telegraph . "Miandad's ethical deficiencies," he wrote, "make him the last man to captain his country, even if it is only Pakistan."

Whispers of ball-tampering simmered just underneath the surface through the tour but burst into the open once the summer was over, as Allan Lamb made some explosive allegations in the Daily Mirror . Pakistan were unhappy about the umpiring and never shy about saying so; the dispute between Aaqib and Roy Palmer in the third Test was an especially ugly flashpoint. All of it was a harbinger of the darker taints this generation of players would endure as the decade wore on, their brilliance having to battle for attention with controversy and scandal.

But that brilliance, most evident on that tour, was unquestionable, as Scyld Berry, who covered the tour, pointed out to the Cricket Monthly . "When was the last time four batsmen scored over a thousand runs in first-class matches on a tour of England as Pakistanis did in 1992? That is one solid batting line-up. When has any bowler, as Wasim did, taken 82 wickets on a tour of England? Saleem Malik batted superbly in both the county games and Test matches. He held the middle order together, the best technique on either side. Very few overseas teams have tried to bulldoze their way over the counties like they did."

Rizwan Hussain is a journalist based in Karachi. Nagraj Gollapudi is a senior assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

RELATED ARTICLES

pakistan tour of england 1992

  • Back to top

{{suggest.tag}}

Search for “ ”

  • INTERNATIONAL Pakistan v New Zealand Pakistan vs New Zealand 3rd T20I
  • ACC Mens T20I Premier Cup United Arab Emirates vs Oman Final
  • T20 LEAGUE IPL 2024 Kolkata Knight Riders vs Royal Challengers Bengaluru 36th Match
  • Punjab Kings vs Gujarat Titans 37th Match
  • Mumbai Indians vs Rajasthan Royals 38th Match
  • Chennai Super Kings vs Lucknow Super Giants 39th Match
  • Delhi Capitals vs Gujarat Titans 40th Match
  • CSA T20 Challenge KwaZulu-Natal Inland vs Lions 53rd Match
  • Boland vs North West 56th Match
  • Warriors vs Dolphins 55th Match
  • Western Province vs Titans 54th Match
  • TBC vs TBC 1st Semi Final
  • DOMESTIC County Division 1 Lancashire vs Essex 11th Match
  • Durham vs Worcestershire 15th Match
  • Nottinghamshire vs Somerset 14th Match
  • Kent vs Surrey 13th Match
  • Warwickshire vs Hampshire 12th Match
  • County Division 2 Gloucestershire vs Sussex 12th Match
  • Glamorgan vs Northamptonshire 11th Match
  • Yorkshire vs Middlesex 10th Match
  • Leicestershire vs Derbyshire 9th Match
  • WOMEN Kalahari Womens T20I Tournament Botswana Women vs Lesotho Women 1st Match
  • Rwanda Women vs Mozambique Women 2nd Match
  • Lesotho Women vs Rwanda Women 3rd Match
  • Botswana Women vs Mozambique Women 4th Match
  • Botswana Women vs Rwanda Women 5th Match
  • Lesotho Women vs Mozambique Women 6th Match
  • Botswana Women vs Mozambique Women 7th Match
  • Rwanda Women vs Lesotho Women 8th Match
  • Indonesia Women v Mongolia Women Indonesia Women vs Mongolia Women 1st T20I
  • Indonesia Women vs Mongolia Women 2nd T20I
  • Indonesia Women vs Mongolia Women 3rd T20I
  • Indonesia Women vs Mongolia Women 4th T20I
  • Indonesia Women vs Mongolia Women 5th T20I
  • Indonesia Women vs Mongolia Women 6th T20I
  • West Indies women tour of Pakistan Pakistan Women vs West Indies Women 2nd ODI (ICC Championship Match)
  • Pakistan Women vs West Indies Women 3rd ODI (ICC Championship Match)
  • Gibraltar Women v Estonia Women Gibraltar Women vs Estonia Women 2nd T20I
  • Gibraltar Women vs Estonia Women 3rd T20I

England vs Pakistan, 4th ODI - Live Cricket Score, Commentary

Latest news.

pakistan tour of england 1992

pakistan tour of england 1992

Cricket Books

Cricket county yearbooks, cricket brochures, cricket autographs, cricket memorabilia, cricket photographs, cricket postcards, cricket programmes, cricket scorecards, football books, football brochures, football programmes, football autographs, football cigarette & trade cards, football memorabilia, football photographs, football postcards, football posters, golf autographs, golf memorabilia, golf photographs, golf postcards, golf programmes, rugby union books, rugby union brochures, rugby union autographs, rugby union memorabilia, rugby union photographs, rugby union postcards, rugby union programmes, wisden - other, wisden 1864-79, wisden 1880-99, wisden 1900-19, wisden 1920-39, wisden 1940-59, wisden 1960-79, wisden 1980-1999, wisden 2000-2024, olympics & athletics, rugby league, horse racing, motor sport, winter sports, racket sports, american football, billiards & snooker, showjumping & eventing, weightlifting & bodybuilding, other minor sports, general sport.

  • Antiquarian
  • Non-Fiction

From this Category

  • Ashes Tour Guides
  • England Tour Guides
  • Aus/NZ/SA Tour Guides
  • India/Pak/SL Tour Guides
  • West Indies Tour Guides
  • Other Tour Guides
  • Cricket Benefit Brochures
  • General Cricket Brochures

Latest News & Items

Good luck to all the runners in the london marathon.

18th April 2024

A new sport for the New Year: Bumble puppy!

11th January 2024

Perfect Putting at the Ryder Cup?

28th September 2023

Cricket » Cricket Brochures » India/Pak/SL Tour Guides » OFFICIAL 1992 TOUR GUIDE: PAKISTAN IN ENGLAND

OFFICIAL 1992 TOUR GUIDE: PAKISTAN IN ENGLAND

OFFICIAL 1992 TOUR GUIDE: PAKISTAN IN ENGLAND

Click to zoom

Official TCCB tour guide.

Paperback. 4to. 128pp. Very good condition.

£6.00 (Code: 49445)

MI Flag

RR won by 9 wickets (with 8 balls remaining)

Pakistan Women Flag

Pakistan Women

West Indies Women Flag

West Indies Women

Match yet to begin

LANCS Flag

Essex won by an innings and 124 runs

WARKS Flag

Match drawn

KENT Flag

Surrey won by an innings and 37 runs

NOTTS Flag

Durham won by 185 runs

LEICS Flag

Middlesex won by 6 wickets

GLAM Flag

Sussex won by 4 wickets

Chennai Super Kings Flag

Chennai Super Kings

Lucknow Super Giants Flag

Lucknow Super Giants

United Arab Emirates Women Flag

United Arab Emirates Women

Uganda Women Flag

Uganda Women

Netherlands Women Flag

Netherlands Women

Thailand Women Flag

Thailand Women

Ireland Women Flag

Ireland Women

United States of America Women Flag

United States of America Women

Sri Lanka Women Flag

Sri Lanka Women

Vanuatu Women Flag

Vanuatu Women

Scotland Women Flag

Scotland Women

Zimbabwe Women Flag

Zimbabwe Women

England vs Pakistan , 4th Test at Leeds , , Jul 23 1992 - Full Scorecard

Pakistan Flag

England won by 6 wickets

graham-gooch

Bad blood, balls and botches

What was supposed to be a fence-mending series between England and Pakistan in 1992 proved to be anything but

ENGLAND v PAKISTAN 1992

Toss: Pakistan

IMAGES

  1. Pakistan vs England 1992 World Cup Final Highlights HD

    pakistan tour of england 1992

  2. World Cup 1992, England vs Pakistan: Three hours of rain changes course of tournament

    pakistan tour of england 1992

  3. History of 1992 World Cup

    pakistan tour of england 1992

  4. Full Scorecard of Pakistan vs England Final 1992

    pakistan tour of england 1992

  5. 14 Proud moments of Pakistan 1992 cricket world cup winer #BataDoSabKo #GeoaurJeenayDo #HarPal #

    pakistan tour of england 1992

  6. England's Class of '92

    pakistan tour of england 1992

VIDEO

  1. Pakistan vs England 1992 World Cup Final Highlights

  2. Pakistan tour England 4 T20 Matches schedule update,2024

  3. History of 1992 World Cup

  4. Pakistan's Journey in 1992 World Cup

  5. Pakistan's Journey in 1992 World Cup

  6. 25th Anniversary of the 1992 World Cup win

COMMENTS

  1. Pakistani cricket team in England in 1992

    The Pakistani cricket team toured England in the 1992 English cricket season, the first tour since the acrimonious visit by England to Pakistan in 1987/88, which was highlighted by the Mike Gatting/Shakoor Rana dispute. Five Test matches and five One Day Internationals were scheduled, running from May to August.. The Test series was won 2-1 by Pakistan, who fielded a consistently strong team ...

  2. Pakistan tour of England 1992

    Check Pakistan tour of England live score 1992, squads, match schedules, Pakistan tour of England points table, fixtures, updates, photos, and videos on ESPNcricinfo.

  3. Pakistan tour of England 1992

    Get 1992 Pakistan tour of England score and Pakistan tour of England schedule with real-time match scores, fixtures, scorecard updates, and results. Check today's Pakistan tour of England match ...

  4. England vs Pakistan

    Get cricket scorecard of 2nd Test, ENG vs PAK, Pakistan tour of England 1992 at Lord's, London dated June 18 - 21, 1992.

  5. 1992 England vs Pakistan 1st Test Edgbaston

    PAKISTAN'S TOUR OF ENGLAND 19921st Test - https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/pakistan-tour-of-england-1992-61462/england-vs-pakistan-1st-test-63575/full-sco...

  6. 1992 England vs Pakistan 2nd Test Lord's

    PAKISTAN'S TOUR OF ENGLAND 1992Pakistan wins an absolute thriller test match at Lords. Wasim and Waqar wins it for Pakistan.2nd Test - https://www.espncricin...

  7. England vs Pakistan, 1st Test

    Catch live and fully detailed scorecard of England vs Pakistan, 1st Test, Jun 04, Pakistan in England Test Series, 1992 on Cricbuzz. ... West Indies women tour of Pakistan.

  8. Pakistan in England, 1992 schedule, live scores and results

    Pakistan in England, 1992 Schedule, Match Timings, Venue Details, Upcoming Cricket Matches and Recent Results on Cricbuzz.com ... 2024 Pakistan tour of England, 2024 Netherlands T20I Tri-Series ...

  9. The Joy of Six: England v Pakistan

    Half a dozen of the most memorable meetings between England and Pakistan, including the 1992 World Cup final Daniel Harris and Michael Butler Fri 15 Jul 2016 06.14 EDT Last modified on Wed 21 Feb ...

  10. Cricket scorecard

    Series: Pakistan in England, 1992 Venue: Trent Bridge, Nottingham Date & Time: Aug 20, 01:00 AM LOCAL. Commentary Scorecard Squads Live Blog Match Facts News Photos. England won by 198 runs ...

  11. England vs Pakistan

    Get cricket scorecard of 1st Test, ENG vs PAK, Pakistan tour of England 1992 at Edgbaston, Birmingham dated June 04 - 08, 1992.

  12. Pakistan tour of England, May-Aug 1992 Cricket Team ...

    Read about Records, / , Pakistan tour of England, May-Aug 1992, / , Tour statistics Cricket Team Records only on ESPNcricinfo.com. Check the Stats & Records of Records, / , Pakistan tour of England, May-Aug 1992, / , Tour statistics Players in Wicket keeper Batting Bowling. ESPN Cricinfo. Live Scores.

  13. Category:Pakistani cricket tours of England

    Pages in category "Pakistani cricket tours of England". The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . 0-9. Pakistani cricket team in England in 1954. Pakistani cricket team in England in 1962. Pakistani cricket team in England in 1967. Pakistani cricket team in England in 1971.

  14. The forgotten invincibles

    Yet when we think of the great touring sides to England, this 1992 Pakistan side does not immediately spring to mind. It is easy to recall a number of Australian sides - the Invincibles of 1948, or the champions of 1989 and 1993, the latter the board from which sprang Shane Warne; even the several vintages of West Indian visitors through the 1980s.

  15. England vs Pakistan

    Get cricket scorecard of 5th Test, ENG vs PAK, Pakistan tour of England 1992 at Kennington Oval, London dated August 06 - 09, 1992.

  16. History of cricket in Pakistan from 1986 to 2000

    Events. Pakistan won the 1992 Cricket World Cup, beating England by 22 runs in the final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 25 March 1992.. Notable Pakistan players in this period include Javed Miandad, Imran Khan, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Mushtaq Ahmed, Waqar Younis, Wasim Akram and Saqlain Mushtaq.. National championships. Winners of the Qaid-i-Azam Trophy from 1986 to 2000 were:

  17. Cricket scorecard

    Series: Pakistan in England, 1992 Venue: Lord's, London Date & Time: Aug 22, 01:00 AM LOCAL Commentary Scorecard Squads Live Blog Match Facts News Photos Pakistan won by 3 runs

  18. World Cup 1992, England vs Pakistan: Three hours of rain changes course

    Pakistan were bowled for a meagre 74 in the group match vs England, before rain saved them. The point Pakistan earned changed the course of the tournament, and perhaps Pakistan cricket in the 1990s.

  19. England vs Pakistan

    Get cricket scorecard of 3rd ODI, ENG vs PAK, Pakistan tour of England 1992 at Trent Bridge, Nottingham dated August 20, 1992.

  20. Official 1992 Tour Guide: Pakistan in England

    Official TCCB tour guide. Paperback. 4to. 128pp. Very good condition. Date 1992 Publisher TCCB Author (PAKISTAN TOUR OF ENGLAND 1992) £6.00 (Code: 49445). Add to basket

  21. England vs Pakistan

    Get cricket scorecard of 4th Test, ENG vs PAK, Pakistan tour of England 1992 at Headingley, Leeds dated July 23 - 26, 1992.

  22. Pakistani cricket team in England in 1962

    The Pakistan cricket team toured England in the 1962 season to play a five-match Test series against England.They also played a match in Ireland. The team is officially termed the Second Pakistanis as it was their second tour of England, following their inaugural tour in 1954.The Test series was the third between the two teams after those in England in 1954 and in Pakistan in 1961-62.