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Carey misses ton as Aussies bat all day to go past 500

Alex Carey makes a splash with 93 but falls late in the day with Australia making slow but steady progress, looking to bat just once in Karachi Test with mammoth first-innings total

Alex Carey fell agonisingly short of a maiden Test century as Australia piled on the runs and the pain for Pakistan, whose hopes of salvaging a draw from the second Test might be boosted by their opponents' preparedness to keep batting.

Carey appeared set to become his team's second century-maker of an innings that had ground its way to 8-505 by the end of day two but fell to the part-time spin of Babar Azam, who claimed just his second wicket in 39 Tests.

It was a cruel end for Carey – bowled by a delivery that kept low in playing his favoured sweep shot – who was in the news for the wrong reasons earlier this week when his accidental (fully clothed) tumble in the team's hotel pool was caught on camera.

But the 30-year-old made barely a misstep in scoring 93 from 159 balls today, the second-top score of the hefty innings behind the 160 scored by Usman Khawaja, who was finally dismissed in today's middle session having batted almost 10 hours in baking Karachi heat.

Despite casting aspersions upon Pakistan's batting intent across the first two days of the first Test, Australia have taken a near identical approach to the second with no guarantee they won't continue their innings into day three.

The lack of urgency in Australia's batting was highlighted by Mitchell Starc's watchful contribution of 28no from 95 balls, a glaring contrast to his Test career batting strike rate of almost 67 per 100 balls faced.

He and Carey batted throughout the final session as the foot-weary Pakistan bowlers summoned a third new-ball, an event the late Shane Warne liked to equate with "dancing and holding hands" as life's more over-rated occurrences.

Image Id: 80253F36348449D6A0250D48937F8190 Image Caption: Alex Carey used the sweep shot to great effect // AFP via Getty

Carey's second Test fifty arrived, fittingly, via reverse sweep, which was a stroke he had deployed effectively throughout his two-hour vigil.

The 30-year-old's highest Test score, in his seventh outing, arrived shortly after courtesy of the stroke's more conventional cousin and he grew in confidence and surety as he closed in on a deserved hundred with debate raging as to when Australia might declare.

Or why on earth they might not.

With temperatures nudging 36C at the height of the afternoon, Australia's preparedness to keep their rivals in the field as they ground out runs at less than three an over was as much to keep their own bowlers and fielders fresh while ensuring Pakistan's were well and truly cooked.

Or perhaps skipper Pat Cummins and his off-field brains trust were conscious of the fact no team has lost a Test match on the subcontinent having batted first and posted a total of 500 or more.

But the tactics also flew in the face of Khawaja's criticism of the home team yesterday when he noted Pakistan had failed to press home their day one dominance in Rawalpindi by scoring at just 3.2 runs an over on the second day before declaring with 17 overs of play remaining.

That was reduced to a solitary over of spin before stumps were drawn due to failing light, an issue that was never going to repeat under Karachi's cloudless skies.

Khawaja had flagged Australia were looking to "drive the game" in today's second session with a view to doubling their overnight total of 3-251, but found runs so difficult to come by due to disciplined bowling and an absence of overt intent their game plan that it almost duplicated what had been rolled out by Pakistan in the drawn first Test.

Standing ovation for Usman as Sajid seed ends Khawaja epic

Apart from Khawaja's heroic knock in the city of his family's heritage and Carey's timely contribution as questions increased about his Test batting returns, there were other elements to celebrate in Australia's grinding two-day batting-fest.

It represented the first time they have posted first innings totals beyond 450 in consecutive Tests on the subcontinent since their previous visit to Pakistan 24 years ago, when they piled on 513 in Rawalpindi and then 4-599 in Peshawar, where skipper Mark Taylor scored his epic 334no.

And Khawaja's 160 featured the most balls faced in a single innings by an Australian batter on the subcontinent since Jason Gillespie endured for 425 deliveries in his still-scarcely believable double-hundred against Bangladesh in Chittagong in 2006.

Image Id: AEF9281D17DB4DC1A8A3AD70455B7001

But the extent to which bat has dominated ball across the first seven days of this Benaud-Qadir Trophy campaign is underscored by the current average per wicket of almost 77 runs.

By comparison, the highest average score per wicket in a series (minimum three Tests) played in subcontinental Asia is the 91 recorded in the three-match 'contest' of 2007, where hosts Sri Lanka belted Bangladesh by an innings in all three games.

And that can be attributed directly to the character of the playing surfaces prepared in Rawalpindi and now Karachi.

The current pitch reaffirmed its listless nature at the very outset of day two when the morning's third delivery – sent down by opening bowler Hasan Ali, armed with a ball barely 10 overs old – bounced twice before reaching wicketkeeper Mohammad Rizwan.

But despite the obvious absence of pace or menace in the soul-destroying surface, Shaheen Shah Afridi insisted on peppering nightwatchman Nathan Lyon with bouncers and – in doing so – helping the elevated tailender within sight of his highest Test score.

With the ball rarely lifting above chest height, Lyon helped himself to a series of pull and hook shots and at one stage in his 80-minute innings, the off-spinner with a Test batting average of 12 was afforded the compliment of three Pakistan fielders set deep on the leg side.

Having been missed at short-leg by Imam-ul-Haq in the penultimate over on day one before he had scored, Lyon became the dominant partner in his 54-run stand (off 100 balls faced) with Khawaja in the first hour.

He survived a tight lbw call on 3 when ball tracking showed he was beneficiary of the umpire's call, and was dropped again on 31 when he chipped a sharp return catch to Faheem Ashraf's left on the bowler's follow-through, by which time he must have felt a maiden Test fifty was his destiny.

However, on 38 – nine runs shy of his Test-career high – he was comprehensively bowled by Faheem, who fired a ball full and fast into Lyon's pads from where it rebounded onto middle stump.

Despite being the set batter when joined by Travis Head, Khawaja struggled to find scoring fluency against tight bowling and strangling fields and when lunch was taken, he'd added just 28 to his overnight total in the two-hour morning session.

The battle became even tougher after the break when the impact of Shaheen's earlier spell, where he repeatedly bashed the ball into the pitch, became obvious, with the wear and tear resulting in pronounced reverse swing for the left-armer.

Shaheen fought a compelling battle with Khawaja, who jammed down on countless in-swinging yorkers at around 140kph, but it was off-spinner Sajid Khan operating from the opposite end who would make the crucial breakthroughs.

The first came when Head – who had taken over Lyon's role as the more productive partner contributing 23 (from 48 balls) in his 43-run union with Khawaja – attempted to play a ball to the leg side around his front pad and was adjudged lbw by umpire Aleem Dar.

The speed with which Head signalled for the decision to be reviewed suggested he felt the ball, delivered from around the wicket, was sliding down leg but scrutiny showed it to be narrowly clipping leg stump and umpire's call duly fell in Pakistan's favour.

There was no such conjecture 10 overs later when Sajid ripped consecutive deliveries past Khawaja's previously unpassable bat, with the second of those taking the top of the left-hander's off-stump, sending the bowler into an animated version of his trademark wicket celebration which is part military salute, part Bavarian Schuhplattler.

A patient partnership between allrounder Cameron Green – whose unfamiliarity with subcontinent conditions was reflected in his taking 40 deliveries to reach 10 – seemed likely to see the visitors safely to tea until the Western Australian was also undone by spin.

Left-arm spinner Nauman Ali, his team's most successful bowler in the series opener in Rawalpindi, looked to have taken on the role usually reserved for batters when he seemingly decided to shut up shop in his final over before the break.

But having revisited the negative outside-leg line of attack that Pakistan so painfully adopted the previous day, and which saw one of the three balls he pushed behind Green's pads being ruled wide, Nauman bamboozled the right-hander with fizzing turn.

The wicket ball was delivered from closer to the stumps and pitched closer to leg stump to draw Green forward in a speculative defensive push, but it spun across the bat face and into off stump in a sign that will doubtless excite Australia's debutant leg-spinner Mitchell Swepson.

Assuming he gets a chance to bowl at some stage over coming days.

Australia XI: David Warner, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Travis Head, Cameron Green, Alex Carey, Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins (c), Mitchell Swepson, Nathan Lyon.

Pakistan XI: Abdullah Shafique, Imam Ul Haq, Azhar Ali, Babar Azam (c), Fawad Alam, Mohammad Rizwan, Faheem Ashraf, Nauman Ali, Sajid Khan, Hasan Ali, Shaheen Afridi.

Qantas Tour of Pakistan 2022

Pakistan squad: Babar Azam (c), Mohammad Rizwan (vc), Abdullah Shafique, Azhar Ali, Faheem Ashraf, Fawad Alam, Haris Rauf, Hasan Ali, Iftikhar Ahmed, Imam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Wasim Jnr, Naseem Shah, Nauman Ali, Sajid Khan, Saud Shakeel, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Shan Masood, Zahid Mahmood.

Australia Test squad: Pat Cummins (c), Ashton Agar, Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Cameron Green, Marcus Harris, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Marsh, Steve Smith (vc), Mitchell Starc, Mark Steketee, Mitchell Swepson, David Warner. On standby: Sean Abbott, Brendan Doggett, Nic Maddinson, Matthew Renshaw

First Test: Match drawn

March 12-16: Second Test, Karachi

March 21-25: Third Test, Lahore

Australia ODI and T20 squad: Aaron Finch (c), Sean Abbott, Ashton Agar, Jason Behrendorff, Alex Carey, Nathan Ellis, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne, Mitchell Marsh, Ben McDermott, Kane Richardson, Steve Smith, Marcus Stoinis, Adam Zampa

March 29: First ODI, Rawalpindi

March 31: Second ODI, Rawalpindi

April 2: Third ODI, Rawalpindi

April 5: Only T20I, Rawalpindi

All matches to be broadcast in Australia on Fox Cricket and Kayo Sports

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