ENG vs PAK 1st Test Day 3: England in charge despite Babar Azam hundred

After an English quartet hammered hundreds on Friday, a trio of home batters helped themselves to centuries to power Pakistan to 499 for seven on day three.

Published : Dec 03, 2022 18:39 IST , RAWALPINDI

Babar was rock solid as usual. His England counterpart Ben Stokes tried to bounce him out on an unresponsive pitch and Babar had no problem pulling him repeatedly.
Babar was rock solid as usual. His England counterpart Ben Stokes tried to bounce him out on an unresponsive pitch and Babar had no problem pulling him repeatedly. | Photo Credit: AP
infoIcon

Babar was rock solid as usual. His England counterpart Ben Stokes tried to bounce him out on an unresponsive pitch and Babar had no problem pulling him repeatedly. | Photo Credit: AP

Pakistan skipper Babar Azam became the seventh batter to smash a century on Saturday, on day three of a veritable runfest in the opening Test against England in Rawalpindi, but the visitor remains on course for a solid first innings lead.

After an English quartet hammered hundreds on Friday, a trio of home batters helped themselves to centuries to power Pakistan to 499 for seven on day three.

Agha Salman was batting on 10 with Zahid Mahmood on one at the other end when bad light stopped play, with Pakistan still 158 behind England’s massive first innings total of 657.

England batter Joe Root told Sky Sports afterwards, “A brilliant day. That last session, all the work we put in came to fruition. It was attritional. We had to be creative throughout the day and we got our rewards at the end,” he said.

Batting records continued to tumble on the placid pitch, however, with all four openers hitting hundreds in the first innings of a Test match for the first time.

Resuming on 181 for no loss, openers Imam-ul-Haq (121) and Abdullah Shafique (114) duly brought up their hundreds before England struck with its spinners.

Imam and Shafique’s 225-run collaboration nearly matched the 233-run opening stand Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett had forged for England.

After 65 overs of denying England a breakthrough, the Pakistan openers, however, fell in quick succession.

Abdullah became Will Jacks’ (three for 132) first Test victim after attempting a cut shot and instead deflecting the ball into Ollie Pope’s waiting gloves.

Abdullah’s third Test hundred included 13 fours and three sixes.

Jack Leach removed Imam by luring the left-hander into stepping out only to find Ollie Robinson at long-on.

Imam smashed 15 fours and two sixes in his third Test hundred - all three of which have come at Rawalpindi.

Azhar Ali (27) got an extra life on 20 when Crawley spilled him at leg-slip but could not capitalise and fell lbw to Leach a short while later.

Babar was rock solid as usual. His England counterpart Ben Stokes tried to bounce him out on an unresponsive pitch and Babar had no problem pulling him repeatedly.

He eventually brought up his eighth Test hundred and first against England with a four off Stokes, making a little prayer before resuming batting.

England claimed four wickets in the final session to maintain its upper hand.

Robinson dismissed Saud Shakeel (37) in the first over after Tea and Babar was the next to go, fluffing a cut shot against Jacks. Babar’s 136 was studded with 19 fours and a six.

“We have three big wickets to take in the morning, then we will try and crash some around and get up to a reasonable total,” England’s Root said.

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ramiz Raja has described the state of the pitch at Rawalpindi as “embarrassing”, blaming it on the lack of Test matches played there

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment