Swann on song as he joins Laker in records

Alastair Cook applauded the continuing brilliance of Graeme Swann after he eased England's nerves and spun the tourists to a 181-run victory on the final day of the first Test against Bangladesh.

After his side laboured for a second consecutive session without success, Swann took three wickets in the afternoon to become the first English off-spinner to take 10 wickets in a match since the great Jim Laker in 1956.

It was a performance good enough to break the considerable resistance of Junaid Siddique (106) and Mushfiqur Rahim (95) and steal the man-of-the-match honours from Cook, who scored 212 runs in two innings.

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But Cook, leading his side for the first time in a Test match, was happy to defer to his in-form team-mate, whose haul was the result of nearly 80 overs on one of Test cricket's slowest, flattest tracks.

"It's a really good win because to get 20 wickets on a pitch like that was a fantastic effort," said Cook after the Tigers' second innings closed on 331.

"Swanny has got 10 himself and to get 10 wickets on that pitch was an amazing effort.

"He has just got so much control of his game right now, he's very easy to captain.

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"He knows the fields he wants and you trust him to wheel away, knowing he's going to make the breakthrough.

"He bowled a lot of overs here so that shows his determination."

Bradford-born Laker, who took 19 wickets in the fourth Ashes Test of 1956 at Old Trafford, is esteemed company indeed for the Nottinghamshire bowler to join in the record books, but Cook did not shy away from the comparison.

"Everything is going right for him, and the skill he's shown over the past 12 months shows it's not a fluke," he said.

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"If he keeps his feet on the ground, there's no reason why he can't be an England great and I'm sure he'll continue doing it."

The 30-year-old spinner was pleased with his day five return after a gruelling, often joyless stint on Monday.

"It was horrible taking no wickets, we were really struggling and this morning was tough as well," said Swann.

"But it's been a good 12 months for me and I'm more than happy for it to keep on going."

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After England's dominance at the start of the match when they declared on 599 on the back of comfortable centuries for Cook and Paul Collingwood, the inevitable questions had been raised over the viability of Bangladesh as a Test-playing nation.

But their guts and determination over the last two days suggest that they are a rapidly improving unit and Cook insisted it was far from a facile beginning to his captaincy.

"Test cricket is supposed to be hard and it was hard graft for us at the end to get those 10 wickets," he said.

"Full credit to their two batsman and the way they fought. Junaid and Mushy batted very well. Last night was probably the worst time for me, towards the end of that session when we'd been in the field all day and couldn't get them out.

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"But I'm quite pleased with how calm I kept. We knew they couldn't keep doing what they were doing, we just had to keep believing it would happen and thankfully it did."

Bangladesh captain Shakib Al Hasan believes his side have proved they are made of the right stuff to compete in Test cricket. He said: "We fought very hard in the second innings and in the first innings Tamim Iqbal, Mushfiqur and Mahmudullah all scored half-centuries.

"Previously, we have only seen one of our batsmen perform at a time. Now we have more than one batsman scoring runs, which is a positive thing.

"I think after the first innings we showed better character.

"We bowled in the right areas, our batsmen tried to leave

the ball when it was in the

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danger zone and played well against the half-volleys and short balls.

"We are still improving, but we have much more discipline than the side we once were.

"On the first morning Jamie (Siddons, head coach) told our batsman to concentrate on making hundreds and now we know we can do that."

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