Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer revealed his side were using a novel training aid in a bid to get the team's batsmen ready to face England fast bowler Stephen Harmison in the second Test here at Old Trafford.
Harmison took four wickets in the first innings of the drawn first Test between the sides at Lord's and Woolmer's players are using a marble slab which causes a ball to rise sharply when it lands on it in an attempt to replicate the extreme bounce often generated by the England star.
"It's an interesting thing I picked up from the Pakistan team. Javed Miandad (former Pakistan batsman and coach), I think, introduced it. "If you don't have players of pace in your bowling line-up to test your batsmen you have to test them some other way during practice.
"A lot of our players enjoy using it. I don't know why because if you hit them it makes a nasty thud," former England batsman Woolmer also told reporters at Old Trafford here Wednesday.
"But if the opposition have someone like Brett Lee or Harmison who gets steep bounce you have to try to replicate that in practice to try to get people to play it." "Afridi is fit and available," said the coach before playing down reports that Akhtar was on the brink of an imminent return from an ankle injury.
"Shoaib Akhtar on a bouncy pitch would be a handful. Unfortunately, he's not ready. He's still 10 days away from bowling properly in a match and then he's got to get match-fit before he could get in the team.
"We don't have Shoaib Akhtar available for this match or the next Test (at Headingley)," Woolmer insisted. And he said that while Pakistan had thought of calling up leg-spinner Mushtaq Ahmed, currently at English county Sussex, slow bowlers had not been a potent force in recent Old Trafford Tests, citing the performance of Australia's Shane Warne in last year's drawn Ashes clash as an example.
"I've watched cricket a lot here in the last four years and spinners haven't been devastating. "Warne's figures were nought for 74 in the second innings against England last year and he's one of the greatest leg-spinners of all time.
"I've also noticed that Old Trafford hasn't turned up too many results. However, the last time it turned up a good result was for Pakistan (in 2001 when the tourists won by 108 runs) and we are hoping those ghosts will come back and haunt England."