Postpublished at 13:31 Greenwich Mean Time 17 November 2015
Charles Dagnall
BBC Test Match Special
"Pakistan have got to use the overs up, but even if they go at five an over, they'll still only get to 210-215."
England win with nine overs to spare
England lead 2-1 in four-match series
Taylor 67* (69), Buttler 49* (50)
Taylor & Buttler add 117 in 19.1 overs
Pak 208: Woakes 4-40; three run-outs
Mark Mitchener, Tim Peach and James Gheerbrant
Charles Dagnall
BBC Test Match Special
"Pakistan have got to use the overs up, but even if they go at five an over, they'll still only get to 210-215."
Anwar Ali is capable of playing some big shots when set, but he's taking a while to get his eye in here. He chews up three dots from the first three balls of Woakes's over before he eventually gets off strike. Another very serviceable over for England.
Former Australia paceman Brett Lee has swapped bowling for Bollywood in a new career as a movie star.
Listen in as he tells BBC Stumped presenter Jim Maxwell about his pre-match nerves before his first screen kiss in the film UnIndian.
Still, it was a decent over from Rashid under the circumstances, just four from it.
Not too much in favour of that one - umpire's call on impact and it was missing the stumps too.
Vic Marks
Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special
"I'm usually sympathetic to these slow bowlers who beat the bat, but I think it's going to be not out."
Rashid has hit Anwar on the front pad - not out is the verdict, but Cap'n Morgan calls for the review...
Tweet #bbccricket
Steven Bell: It looks like @Colly622, external is doing a good job with the fielding #tekkers, external
Mark Counsell: Pakistan with an Englandesque middle order collapse.
The game isn't quite up just yet for Pakistan - Anwar Ali is the new man and he can certainly swing the willow. Woakes' renaissance continues - he now has six wickets in his last two ODIs after none in the previous six.
Vic Marks
Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special
"That's good bowling. Woakes decided, as a variation, to bang the ball into the pitch. Iftikhar, a bit of a novice, wanting to up the run rate, hit it quite well, but not well enough. Root pocketed it without having to move a foot."
Iftikhar c Root b Woakes (Pak 145-6)
Thank you Tim. And hey presto, another wicket falls. Iftikhar is feeling the scoreboard pressure and tries to break the shackles by aiming a big leg-side heave at a back-of-a-length ball from Woakes. The ball looks for a moment as though it might just carry the rope, but it dies and is hoovered up by Joe Root just short of the boundary.
Two off the over from Moeen, who finishes on figures of 10 overs, 0 maidens, 1 wicket for 30 runs.
It's more than nine overs since Pakistan last hit a boundary.
And with that, I'll hand you over to James Gheerbrant.
Just five overs ago, Pakistan had two batsmen set and looked on course for a huge total. Since then, they've lost three wickets for just 12 runs, four of them as dot balls in that over from Willey.
Jonathan Agnew
BBC Test Match Special
"I think Shoaib would have got there if he'd set off."
Vic Marks
Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special
"I'm not sure there was a run there. There was a total lack of communication. Shoaib held his hands out as if to say: 'What are you doing?'"
Rizwan run out (Roy) 1 (Pak 138-5)
The spirit of Inzy lives on. Rizwan flicked it to the leg side, and ambled down the wicket with the haste of a man going to water plants at the end of his garden. He suddenly realises the ball has gone straight to the fielder, his eyes widen more than Bugs Bunny on seeing Elmer Fudd with his shotgun, turns round, falls over, and is easily run out.
The new pair for Pakistan finding runs hard to come by. Two off the over, with more activity in the teams' balconies than on the pitch.
Pakistan (and former England) spin bowling coach Mushtaq Ahmed watches on through a piece of paper rolled up, as if he's the captain of a ship surveying an incoming attack.
Trevor Bayliss looks like he's telling Paul Collingwood a deeply engaging anecdote. It involves a lot of hand gestures. Colly looks engrossed.
Out of nowhere, Pakistan now have two new batsmen at the crease, and the game has taken a huge turn back towards England. One off the over from Moeen, who has just two more to bowl.
Vic Marks
Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special
"It just shows the benefit of applying a bit of pressure. England had them going at three or four an over for a while, and now Hafeez and Sarfraz have gone. I assume Sarfraz was trying to hit it straighter than that, and England now have a real chance to squeeze. Pakistan would take anything over 250 now."
Sarfraz c sub (CJ Jordan) b Moeen 26 (Pak 135-4)
Where have those two wickets come from? Both batsmen, who seemed so comfortable at the crease, have just thrown their wickets away.
Sarfraz charged down the pitch to Moeen, slogged to the leg side, straight into the safe hands of sub fielder Chris Jordan.