Published on 02:57 PM, October 18, 2016

Cricket: Bangladesh Test series will be exciting, says Samit Patel

England cricketer Joe Root is caught out by Nurul Hasan (R) during the warm-up match between England and the Bangladesh Cricket Board XI at the MA Aziz Stadium in Chittagong on October 17, 2016. File Photo: AFP

England and Nottinghamshire all-rounder Samit Patel feels that the upcoming Test series against Bangladesh and India will be exciting with the amount of talent on display.

With players like Haseeb Hameed, Zafar Ansari, and Ben Duckett in the squad the England set up will be hoping that the youngsters will be able to impress in the subcontinent conditions, reports CricketWorld.

England recently won a hard-fought One-Day International series against Bangladesh and Patel believes that it will take some good cricket to beat the hosts in the Tests as well.

"It (the Bangladesh tour) is going to be a tough little tour for England," Patel told in an interview to CricketWorld.

"I think we'll win but we are going to have to play well.

"I think (Alastair) Cook and (Joe) Root have to get the majority of the runs.

"Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid are going to have to come to the forefront.

"It is going to be an exciting series.

"There is going to be a lot of talent on the show."

Following the Bangladesh Test series, England will tour India to take part in a five-match Test series between November 9th and 20th December.

In the Bangladesh Test series, England are likely to hand a debut to Duckett, who is an exciting young talent and scored two fifties – one each in the two recently concluded warm-up games.

Having the experience of playing against Duckett, Patel said that the 22-year-old's ability to keep the scoreboard ticking against the spinners is what makes him a tough opponent to bowl to.

"Ben is a really exciting batsman. Hopefully, he'll get a go in Bangladesh.

"He has all the credentials, he plays spin really well and he keeps playing these sweeps and reverse sweeps and scores runs out there, not just survive. It is quite hard (to bowl to him).

"With the sweeps and reverse sweeps, he plays, it is quite hard to get a few dot balls out there and puts you off length; he is quite tricky to bowl at. He started off really well in the warm-up."

The first Test between Bangladesh and England will get underway at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium in Chittagong on 20th October.

A Bangladeshi policeman stands guard as England cricketers (back) walk back to the hotel after practice in Chittagong on October 18, 2016. Photo: AFP