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Pak vs Eng – Joe Root reaches the batting heights his career was destined for

Before that Test, Joe Root had described the prospect of becoming England's all-time leading run-scorer as “irrelevant” and his reserved reaction to the milestone on Wednesday morning proved he was serious. He waved his bat gently to acknowledge the standing ovation on the dressing room balcony after he bowled Aamer Jamal to the ground to reach 71, but then went straight back to work.

Root's point was that the record would simply be a byproduct of his larger ambitions: “I want to do more than that in this game,” he explained. He stayed true to his word even if he looked drained by the southern Punjab sun as he bowled out Abrar Ahmed for the single that gave him his 35th Test century.

In time, Root will reflect with great pride on his ascension into the pantheon of the greatest batters England – or indeed anyone else – has produced. However, his immediate focus was on putting England in a position to win that first Test: when he reached three figures, he kissed the badge on his helmet before raising his bat.

He then looked skyward and acknowledged the influence the late Graham Thorpe had on his career. Thorpe, who died in August aged 55, had been the driving force behind Root's first Test call-up in 2012 and worked closely with him in the first decade of his career, helping a batsman seam in Yorkshire He became England's best spin player of all time.

Root kept fighting and battling cramps to reach the final score of 176. He played the supporting role in partnerships worth 109, 136 and an unbeaten 243 with Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett and Harry Brook, but was the constant in England's mammoth innings. After 250 overs spread over three days of play, Root has only spent eight balls out of the field.

This was his first century in Pakistan, after a quiet tour two years ago. There remains only one glaring gap in his outstanding Test CV: Root has yet to either score a century or win a Test in Australia. He will be desperate to address both of these deficiencies as England look to win back the Ashes in just over a year.

Root had to contend with more threatening spinners than Abrar on this Multan highway in much tougher conditions. But he played it with complete ease throughout: he didn't score a boundary until he swung a full toss through midwicket to reach 166. Instead, he spent the day milking it mercilessly with flicks from his pads and steers through cover.

This was an innings that doesn't quite convert into a highlight package, more of a slow-burning epic than something small. Root hit just a dozen boundaries in 277 balls but left the Pakistan fielders ragged on a slow outfield with seven threes, 16 twos and an incredible 75 singles. He survived two unsuccessful lbw reviews but seemed under control throughout.

This was nothing new for Jason Gillespie, Pakistan's coach, having spent five years in Yorkshire when Root was still early in his international career. “I remember Joe asking the coaches, 'Tell me what I need to hear, not what you think you want to hear.' “It was a coaching lesson for me,” Gillespie remembers. “He always strives to be better: that was my experience with him.”

Longevity requires resilience – not just mentally, but physically too. Remarkably, Root has never missed a Test due to injury: he has played in 147 of England's 149 games since his debut, with the two exceptions being due to his absence (Sydney 2014) and the birth of his second child (Southampton 2020). .

He appeared to be struggling physically in the heat of the day and struggled up the stairs to the dressing room during tea. But after spending the break recovering – and wearing an “ice sleeve” around his neck – Root ran back to the middle in typical style. He was exhausted by the end, his foot movements limited due to exhaustion, but he maintained his concentration.

“Fighting through this heat all day shows how fit he is mentally – and physically,” Duckett said. “I was just out there for a short training session and it was hard working in that heat. I'm sure he'll sleep well. Between sessions we have a great support team and hydration and food preparation.” Meals are so important on a day like this – but to be honest I think he probably enjoyed it more just being in an air-conditioned room sit.”

It was always a question of when Root would overtake Alastair Cook, not if. After Cook's century record was broken at a sell-out Lord's last month, this sparse crowd in dry Multan provided a far more reserved backdrop – but around the upper echelons of the Achieving this format requires the ability to adapt both temperament and technique to such different environments.

Since relinquishing the captaincy two-and-a-half years ago, Root has progressed to a higher level as a batsman. It's not that leadership skills have had a negative impact on his batting performance – he averaged 46.44 as captain – but since then he has scored 10 hundreds in 30 Tests, averaging 61.11.

If he scores seven more runs on Thursday, Root will become the first Englishman to reach another notable milestone: 20,000 international runs across all formats. While most of them came in Tests, this milestone would be a reminder of his impressive ODI record – and his crucial role in England's only 50-over World Cup victory.

And yet, like James Anderson and Stuart Broad before him, Root has benefited from a streamlined schedule. He has played just 28 ODIs in the last five years and – much to his disappointment – not a single T20I, but his singular focus on Test cricket has given him enough rest to stay fresh and hungry.

He's not finished yet. Root turns 34 in December and has no plans to retire: if his body continues to hold up, he could easily play through to the 2027 Ashes and beyond. At his current rate, Root could surpass the totals of Rahul Dravid, Jacques Kallis and Ricky Ponting next year, while Cook believes he has an even bet to eventually surpass Sachin Tendulkar.

Tendulkar's total of 15,921 is still 3,343 runs away from home, but England play so often that Root will have regular opportunities to pick up the slack, not least if Pakistan continue to produce pitches like this. Is he already England's greatest? A successful tour to Australia next winter would put that beyond any doubt.

Matt Roller is an editorial assistant at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98

By Vanessa

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