Pakistan hold edge ahead of intriguing final day

Mohammad Hafeez scored 151 to help Pakistan set England a testing target of 284, before off-spinner Shoaib Malik claimed two top-order wickets to peg the opposition back in the chase. England need 238 runs to win with eight wickets in hand on the final day, to level the three-Test series 1-1.

Published : Nov 04, 2015 20:00 IST , Sharjah

Ian Bell walks back after being dismissed. Pakistan hurt England's chase of 284 by taking two wickets before close on Day Four.
Ian Bell walks back after being dismissed. Pakistan hurt England's chase of 284 by taking two wickets before close on Day Four.
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Ian Bell walks back after being dismissed. Pakistan hurt England's chase of 284 by taking two wickets before close on Day Four.

Pakistan grabbed two early wickets to hit England hard in their chase of a 284 runs as the third and final Test heads for an intriguing finish after Day Four in Sharjah on Wednesday. England were 46 for 2 with Alastair Cook (17) and Joe Root (6) fighting hard against Pakistan's spinners, led by Shoaib Malik, who claimed both the wickets on a weary Sharjah stadium pitch.

England will need another 238 runs on the fifth and final day on Thursday for a series-levelling win while Pakistan will fancy a 2-0 victory. Pakistan won the second Test by 178 runs in Dubai while the first ended in a draw in Abu Dhabi.

It was Malik, due to quit Tests after this match, who provided Pakistan early breakthroughs, trapping Moeen Ali (22) leg-before and then bowled Ian Bell (nought) in successive overs. Cook and Root survived confident leg-before appeals off Zulfiqar Babar in the dying moments, much to the relief of the England camp.

England's best chase in Tests is 332 they did against Australia at Melbourne in 1928. They have not chased more than 209 runs in Asia, achieved against Bangladesh at Dhaka five years ago.

England could have dismissed Pakistan for less than 355 in their second innings and subsequently chasing an easier target had they not dropped two crucial catches of Hafeez on 113 and Asad Shafiq (who made 46) on 29.

It was paceman Stuart Broad who led the attack admirably with 3 for 44 and was ably backed up by James Anderson (2 for 52) to help England take the last six Pakistan wickets with the second new ball for 126 runs. It was only through Shafiq and Sarfraz Ahmed's 55-run stand for the seventh wicket that Pakistan's lead soared over 250 as the pair batted with determination.

Spinner Samit Patel dismissed the Pakistan wicketkeeper for 36 before Broad had Shafiq to leave Pakistan at 354 for 9.

England took the second new ball after 81 overs with Pakistan at a lunch score of 229 for 4 and Broad struck in the fifth over, trapping Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul-Haq leg before for 38. Misbah hit two fours and a six and became Broad's 50th wicket in the calendar year in 13th Test, the best in 2015. Misbah and Hafeez added an invaluable 93 runs for the fifth wicket.

Hafeez, dropped by Broad off his own bowling when on 113, drove Anderson for two to complete the 150-mark, his fourth 150 plus in all Tests but a run later holed out to spinner Ali at long-on where Bell took a simple catch. Hafeez batted for 380 minutes, faced 266 balls and hit 15 boundaries and three sixes.

With Hafeez's catch, Bell became the eighth English fielder to take 100 plus catches in Test cricket. This is his 118th match. It was a battle of survival for Pakistan in the morning session as England looked for early wickets.

Hafeez survived some anxious moments as leg-spinner Adil Rashid trapped him in front of the wicket with the first ball of the day, after Pakistan resumed on 146 for 3. England challenged New Zealand umpire Chris Gaffaney's not out decision but television umpire Paul Reiffel of Australia upheld the verdict.

One ball later, Hafeez charged down the wicket against a googly from Rashid, and missed the ball completely. However, wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow missed a stumping chance and the ball went for four byes. Hafeez swept Rashid in the next over for a single to reach his century off 169 balls, his second at the Sharjah stadium.

England players wore black armbands in memory of former batsman Tom Graveney, who died on Tuesday after long illness. He played 79 Tests for England.

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