World XI tour: Ali wants to see the back of Amla

The Pakistan pacer says it would be a pleasure to bowl Hashim Amla out when the teams clash in the World XI tour at Lahore next week.

Published : Sep 08, 2017 17:59 IST , LAHORE

Pakistan’s Hassan Ali, the highest wicket-taker at the Champions Trophy, is raring to have a go at Hashim Amla during the next week's World XI tour in Lahore.
Pakistan’s Hassan Ali, the highest wicket-taker at the Champions Trophy, is raring to have a go at Hashim Amla during the next week's World XI tour in Lahore.
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Pakistan’s Hassan Ali, the highest wicket-taker at the Champions Trophy, is raring to have a go at Hashim Amla during the next week's World XI tour in Lahore.

Pakistani bowling sensation Hassan Ali on Friday said he wants to bowl out South Africa's Hashim Amla when he plays an international before a home crowd for the first time at next week's World XI tour in Lahore.

Ali, 23, the highest wicket-taker at the Champions Trophy which underdogs Pakistan won earlier this year, said he ‘can't wait’ to take on the star-studded World XI in the three-match Twenty20 series.

It is the highest-profile international fixture to take place in Pakistan since a deadly militant attack eight years ago drove international cricket — and most other sports — from the country.

"This is my first international match on my home ground in Pakistan. I'm very excited to play in front of my home crowd on my home ground," he told reporters after a practice session at the stadium Friday.

The attack on the Sri Lankan team in Lahore in March 2009, which killed eight people and wounded nine, isolated Pakistan, forcing it to host its ‘home’ fixtures in neutral venues.

Ali said he was ‘sad about this, but put the international players who are coming for the World XI on notice: especially Amla.

"The World XI is a good team, it has very good players, I will try to bowl well to all of them. Especially I would like to out brother Hashim Amla, it would give me more pleasure," he said.

He said he would partner with strike bowler Mohammad Aamir to take as many wickets as possible. "There are partnerships in bowling too just like batting. If one bowler in the pair is being thrashed, the other tries to contain, so there is no competition."

He said coaches were working on fitness and his reverse swing at training. Pakistan is preparing to deploy several thousand security forces in Lahore for the series, scheduled to begin on September 12.

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