LONDON // Jonathan Trott and Stuart Broad's centuries transformed England's fortunes at Lord's yesterday on a day of personal landmarks which began with Mohammed Aamer threatening to bowl the hosts out cheaply.
Instead, after lurching at one stage to a perilous 47 for five, England were rescued by a record unbroken stand of 244 - the best by anyone for the eighth wicket against Pakistan - between Trott (149 not out) and Broad (125 not out ) in a close of play total of 346 for seven on day two of the fourth Test.
Both passed 1,000 Test runs in the course of their innings, Broad on his way to a maiden first-class century and Trott little more than a year after his Ashes-clinching debut at The Oval.
Yet it was Aamer (six for 73) who had made the first bid for the headlines when he became the youngest bowler ever to 50 Test wickets and only the second Pakistani to take six in an innings on the hallowed turf of Lord's.
As England recovered from a rash of middle-order ducks at the hands of Aamer, in a match Pakistan must win to square the series 2-2, this was a day to intrigue the purists as well as delight the statisticians. At a venue where Trott made a double-hundred against Bangladesh earlier this summer, he responded with a 195-ball century in which he alone - until Broad moved into outright counter-attack - had the measure of Aamer.
Trott used the crease and advanced out of his ground to try to negate Aamer's swing under initial heavy cloud cover in an innings which was to be peppered with his trademark, straight-bat clips to leg off the back foot.
Broad, by contrast, stood tall to strike the ball on top of the bounce through the off side and down the ground in a partnership which more than trebled the total from 102 for seven.
England's prosperity - begun by Trott and Matt Prior in an important 50 stand for the sixth wicket - was unthinkable when 18-year-old Aamer was wreaking havoc in the first 20 minutes of the day.
Belying his age to make such telling use of conditions and tame the Lord's slope like an old hand, the left-armer took four wickets for no runs in eight balls.
After Trott and Prior had apparently drawn his sting, Aamer then returned to take two wickets in an over immediately after lunch - only for Broad to help England's No 3 take over.
Kevin Pietersen continued his worrying run of form with a golden duck - and his was his the first of successive noughts from batsmen four, five and six
Pietersen was the odd man out in that he contributed much to his own downfall, rather than being prised out by a delivery of the highest class.
He simply drove at a wide, swinging ball from Aamer and got an obliging edge behind - safely collected by Kamran Akmal in one of his three catches of the day.
The Pakistan wicketkeeper, one of several less than reliable catchers in the tourists' ranks this summer, had already done the decent thing from the final ball of the previous over when Aamer got one to go down the slope from the pavilion end to have Alastair Cook also caught behind.
Paul Collingwood survived the hat-trick ball but got little further before a review of Billy Bowden's not-out lbw decision proved Aamer had swung the ball past the bat and in line.
* Press Association
England
Andrew Strauss b Asif 13
Alastair Cook c K Akmal b Aamer 10
Jonathan Trott not out 149
Kevin Pietersen c K Akmal b Aamer 0
Paul Collingwood lbw b Aamer 0
Eoin Morgan c Hameed b Aamer 0
Matt Prior c K Akmal b Aamer 22
Graeme Swann c Ali b Aamer 0
Stuart Broad not out 125
Extras: (9lb, 7w, 11nb) 27
Total: (for seven wickets) 346
Fall of wickets: 1-31, 2-39, 3-39, 4-39, 5-47, 6-102, 7-102.
Still to bat: James Anderson, Steven Finn.
Bowling: Mohammed Aamer 23-5-73-6 (3nb 2w), Mohammed Asif 26-6-83-1 (2nb), Wahab Riaz 22-4-74-0 (6nb 2w), Saeed Ajmal 30-3-86-0, Yasir Hameed 1-1-0-0, Imran Farhat 9-1-21-0.
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Based: Beirut and Dubai
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Flights
Emirates flies from Dubai to Phnom Penh with a stop in Yangon from Dh3,075, and Etihad flies from Abu Dhabi to Phnom Penh with its partner Bangkok Airlines from Dh2,763. These trips take about nine hours each and both include taxes. From there, a road transfer takes at least four hours; airlines including KC Airlines (www.kcairlines.com) offer quick connecting flights from Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville from about $100 (Dh367) return including taxes. Air Asia, Malindo Air and Malaysian Airlines fly direct from Kuala Lumpur to Sihanoukville from $54 each way. Next year, direct flights are due to launch between Bangkok and Sihanoukville, which will cut the journey time by a third.
The stay
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Contributions: Hundreds of euros expected from typical Kurdish families and thousands from business owners
TV channel: Kurdish Roj TV accounts frozen and went bankrupt after Denmark fined it more than $1 million over PKK links in 2013
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Director: Stephen Merchant
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Four stars
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