Summary
England make 378-5, their highest ODI total
Openers Winfield (123) & Beaumont (104) add 235
Sciver hits 80 from 33 balls
Pakistan 166 all out (Shrubsole 4-19)
Watch highlights (UK users only)
England lead three-match series 2-0
Live Reporting
Mark Mitchener
Cricket in unusual placespublished at 14:44 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
Pkn 10-1 (Sidra 3)published at 4 overs
4 oversOnly a smattering of singles in the Shrubsole over and no boundaries for the tourists as of yet.
Pkn 8-1 (required rate 7.89)published at 3 overs
3 oversJaveria Khan - also known as Javeria Wadood - is next in and keeps out her first ball from Brunt.
Nahida Khan run out 5 (Pkn 8-1)published at 2.5 overs
2.5 oversA direct hit from Danielle Wyatt at backward point and it is all over for the recalled Nahida.
Pkn 5-0 (Nahida 4)published at 2 overs
2 oversEngland seam and swing specialist Anya Shrubsole, who surprisingly did not get among the wickets in the first match, takes the new ball from the Diglis End, with a slip and gully in place. Nahida Khan, brought in for this match, prods two runs into the offside which prompts an angry response from the combative bowler which lip readers would not struggle with.
Pkn 1-0published at 1 over
1 overCloudy conditions as bustling blonde Katherine Brunt thunders in. Just the single off the opening over and required rate is 7.71. The groundsmen are poised by the covers which could offer a respite for the tourists, but no rain yet.
Postpublished at 14:26 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:26 BST 22 June 2016Thanks Mitch, that needed a man with your mathematical brain to keep up with. Now what will the message have been in the Pakistan dressing room? 'see off the opening bowlers'? 'rotate the strike'? Pakistan's highest ever total is 280, against Ireland in 2013. They have only passed 250 four times. A testing target.
Postpublished at 14:23 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:23 BST 22 June 2016And the umpires are already on their way out - so back in the chair to talk you through Pakistan's reply to England's mammoth total, is Jamie Lillywhite.
Postpublished at 14:22 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:22 BST 22 June 2016Postpublished at 14:22 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:22 BST 22 June 2016BBC Test Match Special
Could England play more than one international series per summer?
ECB head of women's cricket Clare Connor on TMS: "We had that a couple of years ago, when we had India in the early summer and then South Africa for Twenty20s. We've got this series, then the Super League, then we're off to West Indies and Sri Lanka to complete the ICC Championship.
"While three ODIs and three T20s against Pakistan isn't a huge schedule, it's about right for us this summer. Having this framework as a sort of Future Tours Programme will allow us to plan better. The ICC Championship is what we've been striving for, which is context. But what we are looking at is, in the next round of the ICC Championship, is it being five ODIs rather than three. It only adds four or five days to a series, and it nearly doubles the amount of cricket you'd play. For teams like Pakistan, that's invaluable."
Postpublished at 14:16 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:16 BST 22 June 2016BBC Test Match Special
ECB head of women's cricket Clare Connor on TMS: "The female game is a huge area of growth for us, along with cricket in our Asian communities. We've got to make sure we maximise these opportunities, and make clear the pathway for girls into their county team and then the Super League as an extra level of competition. Before, if you were a county cricketer and you were nowhere near the England team, you wouldn't have anywhere to progress."
Postpublished at 14:12 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:12 BST 22 June 2016Postpublished at 14:12 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:12 BST 22 June 2016BBC Test Match Special
ECB head of women's cricket Clare Connor on TMS: "It's still the plans to introduce a 50-over Super League next summer, ahead of the World Cup. We've told all counties what the 2017 women's domestic structure will be like - with two performance divisions, eight teams in each, and the rest of the county sides split into regional divisions. We're still looking at the scheduling to align the women's and men's schedules, as the T20 Blast is moving to August, and the [Women's] World Cup starts in the third week of July."
Postpublished at 14:10 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:10 BST 22 June 2016BBC Test Match Special
ECB head of women's cricket Clare Connor on TMS: "I played in that game in Vijayawada in 1997,, external but it was a great morning watching some powerful hitting and seeing some new English records set. We think that knock from Nat Sciver was the fastest fifty in women's ODIs in the modern era."
get involved Get Involvedpublished at 14:07 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:07 BST 22 June 2016#bbccricket
Rob Brown: Nat Sciver doing her best impression of AB de Villiers here! Great hitting!
Ian Bradley: No other word for it, England have marmalized Pakistan, astonishing hitting.
Intervalpublished at 14:03 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:03 BST 22 June 2016As Ebony says, Pakistan's field placings weren't always on the mark - and their ground fielding was poor in places. But let's not take anything away from Winfield, Beaumont and Sciver who were on fire with the bat today.
Keep an ear on TMS, where they're currently speaking to Worcestershire's women's captain, and will shortly be joined by England's head of women's cricket Clare Connor. Who will, no doubt, have a very large smile on her face.
Postpublished at 14:03 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:03 BST 22 June 2016Ebony Rainford-Brent
Ex-England batter on BBC Test Match Special"When it comes to Pakistan the only bowler who caused any problems was the left-armer Sadia Yousuf. Some of their field placing, it didn't make sense. They let batsmen get off the mark too much. They've got to do a lot of learning. They've got to find a way to be smarter with field setting."
Postpublished at 14:00 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
14:00 BST 22 June 2016Postpublished at 13:59 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
13:59 BST 22 June 2016England's Lauren Winfield, who made 123, on Sky Sports: "If we want to push to be the world's best then we've got to bowl sides out so that's what we will try to do now."
Postpublished at 13:59 British Summer Time 22 June 2016
13:59 BST 22 June 2016England's Tammy Beaumont, who made 104, on Sky Sports: "Lauren and I know each other really well, we went to university together so it's really nice to take it into an England shirt. If we get the ball in the gaps it generally goes for four."