Wicketkeeper-batsman in no mood to celebrate drawn Dubai Test
Australia's backs-to-the-wall escape in the first Test against Pakistan triggered plenty of praise back home from fans with low expectations but captain Tim Paine has explained why he had been in no mood to celebrate the draw.
After steering his side to safety through 139.5 overs of fourth-innings resistance in Dubai, Paine noted his team starting to spill out of the viewing area in celebration and immediately put a lid on it.
Paine said he was mindful of Michael Vaughan's words in an Ashes documentary released last year, when the former England captain recalled watching the Australians celebrate an escape at Old Trafford in the 2005 series.
Vaughan said he never thought he would "see an Australian team celebrate a draw" and from then on felt England had the mental upper hand in a series they would go on to win.
“Michael Vaughan said after one of the tests that he felt as an opposition captain that they had them when he saw them celebrating a draw," Paine told reporters on Monday, on the eve of the second and final test in Abu Dhabi.
He added: "I've seen that myself before. I think we were clearly pretty excited by what we've been able to achieve because it doesn't happen too much but you've got to keep a bit of perspective on it and realise that we had been outplayed particularly over the first few days. While it was great we did fight back, a draw is a draw and we're here to win."
The draw was still enough to keep Australia in with a chance of winning their first series in Asia since the 2011 tour of Sri Lanka. Paine said Australia needed to be mentally prepared for another five-day slog against Sarfraz Ahmed's team in the Middle Eastern heat.
"(We) touched on it last week that not many people gave us a chance over here, which is a great opportunity for us to prove people wrong and a great thing to keep driving us," he said. "We're trying to get better every day, and if we manage to play our best next week maybe that is possible. But we've got to turn up for a really tough match, it's going to last five days and we've got to be on for all of those five days and every session."