Pak may play teen sensation Naseem Shah

Pak may play teen sensation Naseem Shah
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Highlights

He is only 16 and reeling from his mother's death last week, but Pakistan believe express bowling sensation Naseem Shah can be a match-winner in the opening Test against Australia.

Brisbane : He is only 16 and reeling from his mother's death last week, but Pakistan believe express bowling sensation Naseem Shah can be a match-winner in the opening Test against Australia.

The exciting teenager is on the cusp of selection for the game at the Gabba starting Thursday after impressing with a fiery eight-over spell against Australia A in Perth.

If he makes the grade, Naseem will join a handful of others to debut at 16, including Indian legend Sachin Tendulkar. The youngest-ever Test player listed by Cricinfo was Pakistan's Hasan Raza in 1996, aged just 14, although his date of birth was later disputed.

"The best thing about Naseem Shah is the control he has on his bowling," head coach Misbah-ul-Haq told cricket.com.au. "He has a very good bowling action and knows which deliveries to bowl.

He can bowl with a very good control. He knows his stuff and bowled really well in the first-class matches he played this season.

"He's bowled well here too and is the standout bowler for us. The way he's been bowling, he can be a match-winner for us," he added.

Brisbane Test

Pakistan have a history of blooding promising players early, accounting for six of the 10 youngest to play Test matches. But Naseem is also carrying the huge extra burden of his mother passing away.

"He spoke to his family and they said 'this is where your mum would have wanted you to be'," Pakistan Cricket Board chief executive Wasim Khan told the Sydney Morning Herald on why Naseem opted to remain in Australia.

"Everyone has rallied around him, keeping a close eye on him, making sure he's okay," Wasim added.

Talking about him, former bowling great Shoaib Akhtar lauded Naseem and compared his temperament to Indian skipper Virat Kohli.

"As a bowler I can say that Pakistan has found a solid [Tagda] fast bowler," Akhtar said on his YouTube channel.

Pakistan coach Misbah-ul-Haq said that pitching the ball consistently on the blind spot or near the top of the off stump would be key to dismissing Australian stalwart Steve Smith.

Smith returned to Test cricket by taking the Ashes by storm earlier in the year. In the five-match series that was held across August and September in England, Smith scored a whopping 774 runs at an average of 110.57.

He carried the good form into the recently concluded T20I series against Pakistan at home.

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