Cameron Green and Alex Carey ensured Australia posted a competitive first innings total, but the tourists were forced to grind for one wicket on a pitch offering little
Match Report:
ScorecardDecider evenly poised as grind looms on flat deck
Australia have been left to rue another squandered chance that enabled Pakistan to survive the final session of the second day for the loss of a solitary wicket, and with the prospect of another lengthy slog in the sub continental heat.
After Pakistan produced a masterclass in reverse swing to restrict Australia's first innings to 391, the visitors were unable to generate a similar response with the ball this evening which Pakistan ended 1-90 with obdurate opener Abdullah Shafique 45no and local hero Azhar Ali unbeaten on 30.
In a haunting reprise of the luckless final two days of the second Test, Australia secured a solitary breakthrough from the 39 overs they sent down tonight although it might have been more had the catching woes from Karachi also not resurfaced.
And compounding the tourists’ woes was a wasted review in the final overs when skipper Pat Cummins hopefully called for closer scrutiny of an lbw shout against Azhar (on 25) which was shown to be comprehensively missing leg stump.
For the third time in two innings, Cummins had Shafique (on 13) edging to slip but so close to the bat was Steve Smith the ball had flown past his left ankle before he was able to react.
Cummins has bowled superbly in this spell, and was unlucky not to have Shafique as well #PAKvAUS pic.twitter.com/w4lDgw786q
— cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) March 22, 2022
Smith had revealed prior to this Test that so low and slow were the pitches in Pakistan, Australia had deemed it better to have their catchers too close and risk turfing chances than to deploy them in more traditional positions where edges were unlikely to carry.
However, with Cummins identifying a weakness in Shafique's game similar to the manner in which Australia repeatedly dismissed England captain Joe Root during the recent Ashes series, the cost of not grasping opportunities offered by the opener was highlighted in Karachi where he endured for a further five hours.
The increasing value of the 22-year-old's wicket is reflected by the fact he's poised to post his fifth half-century in just his fifth Test, with no Pakistan opener boasting a better average than his current 80.66 at the same embryonic stage of their careers.
Cummins had made his team's initial breakthrough four overs earlier when, having brought himself back after a three-overs spell from Green, he slid a ball into Imam ul Haq and caught the opener in front of his stumps.
The slow death from the umpire and Imam-ul-Haq chose to keep walking! #PAKvAUS pic.twitter.com/crqt7ZkrlG
— cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) March 22, 2022
Imam's removal brought a memorable moment for 37-year-old Azhar Ali who – despite having played the first of his 94 Tests to date almost 12 years ago – strode out to bat in front of his home town fans for the first time given Lahore has not previously hosted a Test in that period.
They will surely be cheering their man on tomorrow as Pakistan look to replicate their Karachi effort where they survived almost 172 overs across two days to save the second Test.
Although at their current rate of scoring in this innings – around 2.25 runs per over – if Pakistan are not bowled out earlier, it will be around lunch on day four before they reach parity with Australia.
After Cameron Green and Alex Carey raised Australia's hopes of a 400-plus score by batting through the day's first session and adding 88 runs from 28 overs in that time, their final five wickets fell for 50 after lunch as Pakistan's pace bowlers weaved their magic.
As both teams had predicted prior to the start of Gadaffi Stadium's first Test in 13 years, reverse swing proved the dominant factor and there was no more impressive practitioner of the much mytholigised art than 19-year-old Naseem Shah.
For all the skills he possesses, Naseem Shah’s tactics on this low, slow pitch have been the most impressive: making the most of his speed in the air & skid off the pitch by targeting the stumps in every spell, testing the Australian defences constantly & breaching them #PAKvAUS
— Bharat Sundaresan (@beastieboy07) March 22, 2022
Naseem had blazed on to the international scene aged 16 at the Gabba in 2019, but endured a forgettable first day as a Test cricketer that yielded no wickets despite thinking he'd dismissed Australia opener David Warner from what was shown to be a no-ball.
But having removed Steve Smith and Travis Head yesterday, Naseem outshone his more credentialled pace partner Shaheen Shah Afridi (4-79) today to finish with innings figures of 4-58 from a gut-busting 31 overs.
So committed to the cause was Naseem, who in 2020 became the youngest men's player to claim a Test hat-trick, he almost bowled himself into the parched centre-wicket square in restricting Australia to their first sub-400 first innings total of the three-match series.
After operating for four high-octane overs in the hour before tea, during which he produced the ball of the day to knock over an otherwise assured Green, Naseem sunk to his haunches after the penultimate ball of his fifth over in apparent distress amid Lahore's 33C heat.
.@iNaseemShah breathes fire down the track 🐉
— Pakistan Cricket (@TheRealPCB) March 22, 2022
And finally gets his man! #BoysReadyHain l #PAKvAUS pic.twitter.com/xD9WpiHfms
But not only did he gather himself to complete the over, he fired down another stumps-seeking missile that bamboozled Nathan Lyon and thumped into the batter's bats before spreadeagling his stumps.
Shaheen chimed in with the wickets of Mitchells Starc and Swepson, but Australia would not have been disappointed with their tally on a pitch that will only become tougher to bat upon as its minimal life force drains out, and having been 2-8 inside the opening 10 minutes of the match.
That total was due largely to the efforts of Green (79 in 225 minutes) and Carey (67 in 175) who joined forces with their team in peril yesterday evening and not only survived against the second new ball and reverse swing, but scored at a clip not seen before or since in this Test.
The pair's 135-run partnership was not only Australia's best for the sixth-wicket in Pakistan, it's only been dwarfed across all matches between the teams by a couple of stands from Justin Langer and Adam Gilchrist - at the WACA in 2004 (152) and their famous Hobart union in 1999 (238).
Cameron Green & Abdullah Shafique
— Azeem Rafiq (@AzeemRafiq30) March 22, 2022
Future of international cricket 😍😍
Furthermore, Australia's comeback after finishing the previous evening 5-206 represented their best batting recovery in Tests on Pakistan's turf since the similarly poised 1980 Test at the same venue, where an unbeaten 150 from Allan Border enabled them to bounce back from 5-204 to post 7(dec)-407.
Not surprisingly given the ground's history, that match ended in a draw.
The duo's defiance came in the face of another bout of sustained reverse-swing bowling after Pakistan's pace bowlers got the ball to move demonstrably in the sixth over of the day, at which time the second new ball was barely 10 overs old.
But no sooner had Shaheen swerved a couple of deliveries sharply into left-hander Carey, he was removed from the attack in favour of the significantly slower Hasan Ali while spinner Nauman Ali had replaced Naseem at the other end.
For the ensuing half-hour, Green and Carey were rarely troubled as they scored at four an over with the only nervous moment coming when Carey (on 27) was adjudged to be out in circumstances that nobody was able to adequately explain.
The bizarre interlude occurred when Hasan swung a ball late into the Australia keeper from around the wicket and it evaded Carey's inside edge as it zeroed in on his off-stump and then deviated sharply and bounced well before reaching keeper Mohammad Rizwan.
Umpire Aleem Dar eventually raised his finger in response to the Pakistan appeal, though he was apparently unsure why and – upon Carey immediately calling for the decision to be reviewed – he provided an additional 'soft' signal of out, as if querying whether the ball had carried to Rizwan as a catch.
Mercifully, slow-motion video solved the deepening mystery by revealing the ball had missed both bat and boot and, while much of the deviation was due to it landing in bowler's footmarks on the crease line, it also looked to have grazed Carey's off stump before bouncing into Rizwan's gloves.
With all potential modes of dismissal ruled out and the 'magic bullet' theory disproved, Pakistan skipper Babar Azam decided it was time to deploy his big guns and Naseem was recalled to the attack as he and Shaheen operated in tandem with off-spinner Sajid Khan for the remainder of the session.
But by that stage, both batters had posted half-centuries and the hopes expressed by Pakistan's new bowling coach – and former Australia Test quick – Shaun Tait that the home team snare a wicket or two inside the day's opening hour had proved illusory.
The breakthrough came soon after the break, in the least likely circumstances when left-armer Nauman – whom, along with fellow spinner Sajid Khan, had borne the brunt of Carey's multi-sweep shot assault – trapped Australia's keeper lbw.
Nauman fired a faster, flatter ball into the surface and it spun past the inside edge of Carey's bat and pinned him so palpably in front of middle and leg stumps that not even the batter's recent track record with DRS could spare him.
The review couldn't save Carey. @Ali17Noman strikes post lunch! #BoysReadyHain l #PAKvAUS pic.twitter.com/HlPPONfbWR
— Pakistan Cricket (@TheRealPCB) March 22, 2022
With only the bowlers left to support him, Green found himself in a gripping battle against the reverse-swinging ball, a phenomenon he had not encountered in his nascent Test career until he arrived in Pakistan a month ago.
Having lifted Australia past the 350 Usman Khawaja had identified the previous evening as "a really good total" on the lifeless Lahore surface, Green succumbed to an intense examination from Naseem and lost his middle stump 21 runs shy of a maiden Test ton.
With Naseem near unplayable as he swung the ball prodigiously at speeds of up to 145kph, it was scarcely surprising the rival tailenders toppled quickly as the tourists lost their final three wickets for 22 runs in less than four overs.
But they could take some solace in knowing no team has lost a Test at Gadaffi Stadium having posted a first innings total of at least 391.
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.
First Test: Match drawn
March 12-16: Match drawn
March 21-25: Third Test, Lahore
Pakistan ODI and T20 squad: Babar Azam (c), Shadab Khan, Abdullah Shafique*, Asif Afridi, Asif Ali, Fakhar Zaman, Haider Ali, Haris Rauf, Hasan Ali, Iftikhar Ahmed, Imam-ul-Haq*, Khushdil Shah, Mohammad Haris, Zahid Mahmood, Mohammad Rizwan, Mohammad Wasim, Saud Shakeel*, Shaheen Afridi, Shahnawaz Dahani, Usman Qadir (*ODIs only)
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, Lahore
March 31: Second ODI, Lahore
April 2: Third ODI, Lahore
April 5: Only T20I, Lahore
All matches to be broadcast in Australia on Fox Cricket and Kayo Sports