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Pakistan v England: Rehan Ahmed to become youngest man to play for England

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Rehan Ahmed acted as a sub fielder during England’s wins in the first two Tests in Rawalpindi and Multan
Venue: Karachi Date: 17-21 December (05:00 GMT)
Coverage: Live Test Match Special radio and text commentary on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra & BBC Sport website, plus desktop, tablets, mobiles and app.

Leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed will become the youngest man to play Test cricket for England after being handed a debut in the third Test against Pakistan.

The 18-year-old breaks the record of legendary Yorkshire batter Brian Close, which has stood since 1949.

Ahmed and wicketkeeper Ben Foakes come into the side in Karachi in place of pace bowler James Anderson and all-rounder Will Jacks.

England have already won the series and are looking for a 3-0 clean sweep.

No visiting team has ever beaten Pakistan 3-0 in their country, while England have only ever earned three previous clean sweeps in away Test series of three matches or more.

Leicestershire’s Ahmed will be aged 18 years and 126 days when the Test begins on Saturday. Former captain Close was 18 years and 149 days when he played against New Zealand at Old Trafford 73 years ago.

“I’ve been watching him closely, without letting him know I’ve been watching him closely,” England captain Ben Stokes told BBC Sport.

“It’s a great opportunity to let Rehan go out and really express himself. There’s not too much pressure to perform, just to have fun.

“You only make your debut once, you can never make it again. If we can make him feel like he’s had a ball of a time out there, and he walks off with wickets and runs, that would be great.”

Ahmed has been named in the England side despite leaving training early on Friday because he felt unwell.

He will not be the youngest person to play a Test for England – left-arm spinner Holly Colvin was 15 years and 336 days when she played for the women’s team against Australia in 2005.

The Leicestershire man has played only three first-class matches, taking nine wickets at an average of 30. He was part of the England team that reached the final of the Under-19 World Cup this year and played for England Lions against the touring South Africans in the home summer.

He was then named in the England Lions squad for a training camp in the United Arab Emirates and added to the full squad during a warm-up game in Abu Dhabi in November.

Ahmed adds a second frontline spin-bowling option to the tourists’ XI on a Karachi pitch that is expected to turn.

He considers himself to be a batter and made a century batting at number five for Leicestershire against Derbyshire in his last first-class match in September.

“It’s very tough to tell what his biggest strength is, bat or ball,” added Stokes. “He likes to show off with the bat, because he’s got so many different shots. I’m very excited to see what he’s got with the ball.

“Our message to him is ‘look to take wickets with the ball, smack it with the bat and in the field chase after it until it goes for four’.”

Foakes takes the gloves from Ollie Pope after missing the first Test through illness, then being left out of the second.

Jacks made his debut as a late replacement for Foakes in the first Test and took six wickets with his off-spin in the first innings of England’s win in Rawalpindi, but bowled only eight over in the second-Test victory in Multan.

Stokes confirmed that the decision to omit Anderson was purely to protect the 40-year-old with a home Ashes series against Australia next summer.

“Being 2-0 up, it was the right choice to let Jimmy have a rest,” said Stokes.

“Looking at what we’ve got coming up, I am in the back of my mind looking at the Ashes. I want to have a group of eight or nine bowlers.

“If we were to pick Jimmy and something happened to him, I’d be kicking myself forever if it led to him being injured. It’s about looking after him more than anything else.”

Meanwhile, former Pakistan captain Azhar Ali has announced he will retire from Test cricket after the final match of the series.

Azhar, 37, has played 96 Tests, scoring 7,097 runs – only four Pakistan batters have ever scored more.

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