May 19, 2024
Jack Leach speaks of his pride at taking 100th Test wicket

Jack Leach speaks of his pride at taking 100th Test wicket

‘It’s more than I felt I’d ever achieve’: Jack Leach speaks of his pride at taking 100th Test wicket saying the ‘special’ achievement made up for all the struggles over career to date

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Jack Leach spoke of his pride after taking his 100th Test wicket – and said the milestone made up for the challenges he has faced during a career often threatened by illness and injury.

A well-known sufferer of Crohn’s disease, Leach has at various points been struck down by sepsis, Covid and concussion – and was in danger of missing the first Test at Rawalpindi after a virus swept through the England camp.

But he recovered to take the match-winning wicket there in the gathering gloom, and on the second day in Multan helped blow away Pakistan’s middle order with the key wickets of Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan, before finishing with four for 98 to earn England a priceless lead.

Jack Leach spoke of his pride at having taken his 100th Test wicket after a number of struggles

Shakeel, superbly caught by Jimmy Anderson, made Leach the 20th England spinner to reach 100 in Tests. And his average (33) is lower than other, more celebrated, slow left-armers – Monty Panesar, Ashley Giles, Phil Tufnell and Phil Edmonds among them.

‘I can’t really believe it,’ he said. ‘It’s more than I felt I’d ever achieve. I need to remember that. As sportsmen, it’s easy to just push on to the next thing, and nothing’s ever enough. But if you told me when I was a kid that I’d take 100 wickets, I would have laughed at you. So yes, it is special.’

The pick of his dismissals, though, was the ball that did for Rizwan. Pitching on leg stump, it turned past the right-hander’s back-foot defensive prod to hit the top of middle and off.

The left-arm spinner has been backed by the McCullum-Stokes axis and is reaping the rewards

Later, Leach said his favourite Test wicket came when he bowled Indian opener Rohit Sharma, who was defending on the front foot at Chennai in February 2021. But he said the ball that got Rizwan was ‘right up there’.

He added: ‘It felt good coming out of the hand. He’d just hit me for four over the top, so I tried to put a little bit more on that one. And when he went back, I thought, that’s good – I might have him in a bit of trouble.’

In the immediate aftermath of the Rawalpindi win, Leach only half-jokingly said he felt a ‘bit of a fraud’, having nipped in with the final wicket after England’s seamers had done a lot of the heavy lifting.

Leach said his dismissal of Muhammad Rizwan was 'right up there' in terms of his favourite dismissals

Leach said his dismissal of Muhammad Rizwan was 'right up there' in terms of his favourite dismissals

Leach said his dismissal of Muhammad Rizwan was ‘right up there’ in terms of his favourite dismissals

But he removed Pakistan opener Abdullah Shafique on the first evening in Multan, then built on Ollie Robinson’s crucial dismissal of Babar Azam on the second morning to put England in charge.

‘I feel like I’m just loving playing for England, the most I’ve ever loved it,’ he said. ‘I’m aware everyone has their challenges, and I’m aware mine have been quite out there. But that’s good, because I want to be open and honest.

‘There have been some definite lows along the way, but this does sort of make it all worth it.’

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