LONDON: Wahab Riaz has warned any England cricketers who âsledgeâ or verbally abuse their Pakistani opponents during the upcoming Test series may get more than they bargained for.
Thursday sees England and Pakistan meet at Lordâs for the opening Test in a four-match series.
It will be Pakistanâs first series in England since their infamous 2010 tour.
That saw bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif, together with the then captain Salman Butt given five-year bans and jail sentences for their roles in deliberately bowling no-balls during that yearâs Lordâs Test as part of a spot-fixing âstingâ operation by a tabloid newspaper.
Later that tour, when the teams returned to Lordâs for a one-day international, fast bowler Riaz and England batsman Jonathan Trott had to be separated in the nets after an angry exchange of words.
Riaz, recalling the incident, told reporters at Lordâs on Tuesday.
"He was a bit rude and when it comes to being rude you can never beat the Pakistanis on it. We are the most rude when it comes to it.
"We are nice but if somebody is rude we wonât spare it."
The fast bowler added: "He was a bit rude, he was angry, he was not scoring runs, he was getting out early in the ODIs - he was doing well in the Tests.
"It was a frustration he tried to take out on me."
Amir is now back in the Pakistan squad and set to make his Test comeback at Lordâs.
Riaz insisted Amir would rise to the occasion and that the Pakistan squad were fully behind his fellow left-arm quick.
Pressed on the issue once more, Riaz told an English journalist: "Itâs gone now buddy, live in the present."






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