Pakistan v England: first men’s cricket Test, day three – live | Pakistan v England 2024

Key events

10th over: England 113-1 (Crawley 78, Root 34) Just a single from Abrar’s second over.

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9th over: England 112-1 (Crawley 77, Root 34) Crawley speeding towards three figures here, four squeezed wide of slip.

“Given the clear lack of interest in this from a Pakistani spectator perspective and with the prevalence of white ball cricket, it seems slightly silly that they have prepared such a flat wicket,”writes Thomas Whitaker. “Given the modern playing style and the need to engage audiences, surely a more bowler friendly wicket would make sense??” I don’t think they wanted to risk their slightly fragile batting line up with anything more testing – but would love to hear opinions from any locals up and reading.

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8th over: England 107-1 (Crawley 72, Root 34) Spin from Abrar Ahmed, in nice pair of glasses. England pinch six from the over, plus a no-ball.

“Awake… and staring into the abyss!!” Hello there Arnab Banarjee.

“… but sometimes try out as an Extra to get away from the day job, and off for a fitting this morning somewhere near Old Street in London! Then back for some Test and Wotld T20 with Harman’s team also staring into the abyss!”

Sounds intriguing!

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7th over: England 100-1 (Crawley 68, Root 32) Shaheen Shah Afridi with the (almost) new ball. A false start to begin as he runs past the stumps without delivering as Crawley pulls away. The first real ball is wide of off stump and barely bounces above ankle level. Then Crawley stretches those long levers and leans into a peachy cover drive for four.

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The players are out….let’s go!

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Joe Root needs 38 more runs to overtake Alastair Cook as the highest scoring Englishman in Tests, a few more to overtake Sachin Tendulkar.

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With ten minutes to go before we start, time for me to make a quick cup of tea. Do send me a message if you’re awake and staring into the blackness, on [email protected]. The pitch, says Athers, is still full of runs.

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Simon Burnton

The sightscreens are a curious feature of this ground. There are big screens at each end that show a series of ads for sponsors, but the whitest white they can muster isn’t very white, so for them to function as sightscreens whenever the bowler is running in from their end a sheet is pulled over them using an ingenious pulley system which requires four people at each end – three to pull the pulleys and another to spot when it’s time to pull, plus a fifth to drape more sheets over the boundary hoardings. Seems an extraordinarily work-intensive solution, but it works

Pulley system: Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images
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Duckett is fit

Simon Burnton

Simon Burnton

“I can tell you that Ben Duckett is playing Pig, the team’s morning keepy-uppy game, and has no sign of strapping on his left hand, so that’s positive, right? And official word is dribbling through now – he’s good to go.”

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And good news from our man on the ground Simon Burnton…

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Updated at 

Some pretty skies from Multan last night:

It is currently 29 degrees in Multan, feeling more like 31 degrees, and the air quality is “unhealthy”: 170 US AQI – or 16 times the reccommmended WHO level.

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Preamble

Good morning! It’s hot, it’s dry and it’s day three in Multan, where Pakistan piled up 556 to a largely empty stadium, England sweated, dropped a couple of catches, Chris Woakes’ big boot caught on the boundary rope and Ben Duckett dislocated his thumb.

Salman Agha’s hundred from No. 8 frustrated England, but not as much as Duckett’s dodgy digit, which left Ollie Pope to open with sub-optimal results. Crawley and Root though smoothed the troubled waters with an unbroken stand of 92 at a fair lick.

So now we get to see whether the pitch stays as flat and crushingly unfriendly for bowlers as it was for the first two days, or whether the cracks have yawned and stretched to add a little spice . Play starts at 6amBST, do keep us company.

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