Rehan Ahmed described his five-wicket haul, which placed England on the verge of a historic Test series sweep in Pakistan on Monday, as a “dream come true.”
The third and final Test of the tour saw Ahmed take two wickets on day one, but it was nothing in comparison to what he would do on day three, when the 18-year-old spinner tore through Pakistan.
His match statistics of 7-137 are the best for an England debutant since Peter Such’s 8-145 against Australia in 1993, and they have Pakistan on the verge of losing their first-ever home Test series.
Ahmed admitted to revising his earlier judgement that Saturday was the happiest day of his life after seeing Monday’s performance on BBC Test Match Special.
“It’s probably the best day of my life again! To get five on my debut is a dream come true. It’s great,” Ahmed said.
“I was thinking about the five-for. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t. But at the same time, I was trying to forget it. The more you try and chase the wicket, it just won’t happen.”
The highlight of Ahmed’s performance came when his delivery had Pakistan skipper Babar Azam caught by Ollie Pope, just as the hosts appeared to have steadied the ship following Jack Leach’s early three-wicket haul.
“I’ve bowled better balls and got wickets so just to get Babar Azam out is a dream come true,” Ahmed said. “He’s a very good player. Pope has got good hands so it’s good the ball went to him.
“I liked [Mohammad] Rizwan’s wicket because I’ve been working on my leg spin for the last two years. To get one to spin on the other side was great.”
Meanwhile, Pakistan batsman Azhar Ali saw his final Test innings end in disappointing fashion as he was bowled for a four-ball duck by Leach in his final outing before retirement.
Azhar struggled to hide his frustration when speaking to Sky Sports afterwards, saying: “You want to finish on a high and win your last game, you want to contribute. Unfortunately, it wasn’t to be.
“It was a bit of a disappointment, so I have mixed feelings. I am thankful to the England and Pakistan team for giving me a send-off.
“I was more emotional in the first innings than the second. It was a nervy start in the first innings. I was quite calm in the second but I am a human being so there was some emotion.
“I played down the wrong line and Leachy got me out. He has bowled really well in this series. It was my time to say goodbye to international cricket.”