Cricket: Andrew Strauss wants England to eliminate the errors at Lord's

Andrew Strauss says England can approach Thursday's Lord's decider against Pakistan in confident mood despite their third Test slump.

Strauss' side were comfortable victors in the first two matches of the npower series but twice collapsed at the Oval on the way to a four-wicket defeat.

That broke a six-game winning streak in 2010, a run which Strauss feels says at least as much about his side as four poor days in London.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"We've played a lot of good cricket this year so let's put everything in context," urged the captain.

"We've got every right to feel very confident going to Lord's. We want to finish the season on a high and win it and everyone will be very motivated to do so.

"We do, though, have couple of things we need to make sure we don't repeat.

"There have been wickets that have done a bit this series, but with this wicket perhaps there were fewer excuses. We have to take that on the chin and not repeat our mistakes."

Pakistan spinner Saeed Ajmal has become an increasingly key figure for his side since being drafted in place of Danish Kaneria for the second Test at Edgbaston, but Strauss has backed England to improve against him.

Ajmal was central to the hosts' second-innings collapse, returning four for 71 and baffling a succession of batsmen with his well-disguised doosra.

Asked how England planned to combat the 32-year-old's threat, Strauss said: "It's an individual thing, sometimes you pick him, sometimes you don't.

"Test cricket is about managing your game and if you haven't picked the doosra you have to know what shots to be wary of playing, what the percentages are.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"The more you face someone the more you're clear on that. It's like Muttiah Muralitharan when he first came out with his doosra and got a lot of wickets with it. The more you face it, the more you understand where you look to score off him.

"We should have been better in this game but the more we play Ajmal the better we'll be against him."

For the fourth Test, England added Yorkshire pace bowler Tim Bresnan to the 11-man squad which took on Pakistan at the Oval.

Strauss has been resolute in focusing on the task in hand this summer, regularly deflecting or downplaying any Ashes speculation.

He reacted disinterestedly when told of Ricky Ponting's suggestion that Australia could claim the series 5-0 last week and was similarly unmoved by suggestions that defeat at the Oval could have some bearing on the winter.

"A lot of people talk about sending messages here and there or about saying things (to Australia) but I don't think that's the way we look at it," said Strauss.

"If we had won this series 4-0 that's not going to make it any more likely that we win that first Test against Australia.

"It's all about us playing as well as we can and in terms of the Ashes it's about us turning up in Brisbane and playing good cricket. What happens here has a fairly small effect on what happens there."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

England have recalled bowler Tim Bresnan for the final test against Pakistan at Lord's. Bresnan is the only change to the squad.

"Ultimately the team is looking for an improved performance to finish the series well," national selector Geoff Miller said.

Pakistan captain Salman Butt, meanwhile, says England could be heading for a tough time in Australia.

England's seamers have prospered with murky skies and seaming wickets for much of the summer but Butt is uncertain how they will perform without those home comforts.

"England are best in their conditions because they have been brought up here but anywhere else you play I think Australia have the edge," he said, having played against both sides this summer.

"Australia's nature is to attack teams and the only way to beat them is to take it to them and counter-attack. If this is the English bowling they will find that hard in Australian conditions.

"My experience says Australia are a much better side in their home conditions than they were over here in the last Ashes.

"The ball doesn't swing as much there and the bowlers have to work very hard."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Butt, who was thrust into the Test captaincy at short notice after Shahid Afridi's shock resignation earlier this year, also gave thanks for the presence of 18-year-old left-armer Mohammad Aamer.

His five for 52 undermined England's second innings and helped him pick up the man-of-the-match honours.

"He is obviously the best young bowler, the best one around," said Butt.

"I think he will win the ICC's Emerging Player award because I haven't seen such talent at that age before.

"Even Wasim Akram said at that age he was not that good. Aamer has something special inside him."