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Captain says Hameed will take the opportunity with “both hands”, if he plays
“Just to go out there and be Moeen Ali,” Root said of his returning team-mate. “He has the ability to go out there and win games with bat and ball, he’s proven that. He plays his best cricket when he is enjoying it and he’s full of confidence – it certainly looks that way at the moment, the way he has taken to the Hundred, the way he has led Birmingham Phoenix.
“I would happily give him a huge amount of responsibility if he does play because he responds extremely well to that,” Root added. “He is a leader within the dressing room, a great personality, he drags people with him on the field and in the dressing room, so it will be great to have him back around.”
Moeen also performed admirably in his only Test appearance in the past two years, as he bounced back from a bout of Covid-19 in Sri Lanka to claim eight wickets in the second Test against India, as well as blast a quickfire 43 from 18 balls from No. 9 in the final moments of England’s 317-run defeat. Thereafter, however, the circumstances of his departure from the tour clearly rankled – not least when Root himself erroneously stated that Moeen had “chosen” to go home, when in fact his absence had been agreed as part of the ECB’s rest-and-rotation policy.
Root apologised at the time for his misrepresentation of the situation, but insisted he did not regret the circumstances of Moeen’s continued absence, given that his priorities, like so many others in England’s set-up, are currently split across formats in the lead-up to the T20 World Cup this winter.
“We’ve tried to manage things as best we can over a period of time and I’ve always been a huge fan of Mo,” Root said. “I think he’s a wonderful cricketer across the formats, I think he’s a great ambassador for the game, and it’s wonderful to see him back in the Test arena, being back in a Test squad.
“It was a brilliant performance he put in in Chennai and if he gets an opportunity, he’ll be desperate to impress and show everyone how good he is in Test cricket as well as white-ball cricket. He’s certainly a big contender. We haven’t been to the ground yet and we’ll look at conditions and weigh things up but he’s in a great position to play.”
Should Hameed get the nod, it would mark a recall even more extraordinary than Moeen’s, given the depths to which his game slumped in the years after his progress was abruptly halted by a broken hand. He failed to make a first-class century in either of his next two seasons for Lancashire, including a grim campaign in 2018 when he averaged 9.44 with a top score of 31.
“More than anything, it takes a huge strength of character to be able to go through something like that and get yourself back into the position that he is in right now,” Root said. “Since the first day I met him I’ve been extremely impressed with him as a person, with his maturity as a young man then. I think that served him really well during a difficult spell in his career and now you’re seeing him come into some really good form.
“We think of him physically maturing but I think his game has grown as well. He’s added shots to what is a very strong defence and has turned himself into a brilliant player. His work ethic is outstanding. He thinks about the game extremely well and it’s great to have had him in and around the squad this summer. If he gets an opportunity I’m sure he’ll look to take it with both hands and try to make the position his own in this team.”
Andrew Miller is UK editor of ESPNcricinfo. @miller_cricket