Birmingham: Moeen Ali is confident it will take more than a pink ball to put him off his stride during England’s inaugural day/night Test.

The off-spinning all-rounder was England’s man-of-the-series after starring with both bat and ball during the recent 3-1 Test triumph at home to South Africa.

Now Birmingham-born Ali returns to the city’s Edgbaston ground, where he came through the youth ranks with Warwickshire before joining Midlands rivals Worcestershire, for what will also be the England team’s first taste of floodlit Test cricket in a series opener against the West Indies starting on Thursday.

There has been much talk about how the pink ball — required for floodlit Tests as the players’ traditional clothing makes the white ball familiar from One Day Internationals as unusable as the standard red — will affect bowlers.

But Ali, who hit a fifty but bowled just three overs during the day-night round of County Championship fixtures scheduled as preparation for this Test, said: “It’s different it feels lighter off the bat.

“Sometimes you don’t feel like you’ve hit it, and it goes; other times you’ve nailed it, and it doesn’t,” he added at an event staged by series sponsors Investec.

“But you get used to it I did by the end of the [net] session.”

As for bowling with a pink ball, the 30-year-old Ali, who against South Africa became the first man to take 25 wickets in a four-Test series, said: “The seam is good — it’s not quite as slippery. It spun, maybe because the seam is hard.

“Seeing it is fine. It will be interesting at twilight, but I will try not to think about it.”

There have been suggestions that the pink ball does not swing as much or for as long as the traditional red cricket ball.

Meanwhile, Ali’s teammate Stuart Broad, feels playing five-day cricket under lights, with a pink ball, is a “step into the unknown”.

“I don’t know what to expect. We’re going to have to be so adaptable on the day, and figure out what’s going on.” he told The Telegraph.

Meanwhile Dukes, the British-based manufacturer of the pink ball in use for this week’s day/night Test have also had to endure a ‘knocking campaign’ from Australian rivals Kookaburra, who claim that the Aussies’ pink ball is way ahead of its English rival.

The Edgbaston game will be cricket’s fifth day-night Test, but the first played with a Dukes ball.

The other four Tests — three in Australia and one in Dubai — all used a Kookaburra, and the rival manufacturers fought their own battle this week over the merits of their respective balls.

“This [day-night Test] is an experiment and people will expect miracles, but I think you have to give it a bit of time,” Dukes owner Dilip Jadojia told the Independent news site.

“I think the colour is perfect, but if there are lessons to be learnt then they’ll be learnt.”