Summary

  • Woakes takes 4-45, bowling nightwatchman with final ball of the day

  • Skipper Misbah, 42, scores 10th Test century

  • Misbah and Shafiq put on 148 for fifth wicket

  • England batsman Carberry diagnosed with cancerous tumour

  1. Postpublished at 18:33 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Phil Tufnell
    Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special

    It's given England a bit of momentum. They looked a bit flat when Misbah and Shafiq were batting. But well played Pakistan. They got themselves in trouble early on but came back with those partnerships.

  2. Postpublished at 18:33 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Jonathan Agnew
    BBC Test Match Special

    Rahat bowled for nought playing the shot of a man on 76 not out.

  3. wicket

    WICKETpublished at 18:31

    Rahat b Woakes 0 (Pak 282-6)

    Last ball of the day! Rahat Ali plays one of the worst shots you will ever see by a nightwatchman to gift a wicket to England. He could say he's done his job - he's protected the batsmen, but it looks ruddy awful. Short and wide from Chris Woakes, Rahat temporarily thinking he's Sachin Tendulkar, a back-foot drive inside-edged on to the stumps. Bonkers.   

  4. Postpublished at 18:28 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Jonathan Agnew
    BBC Test Match Special

    He took that on the shoulder, Misbah. Broad might be saying to him 'do a press-up now you so and so'!

  5. Pak 282-5published at 18:27

    Misbah, safe in the knowledge his name is to be etched on the honours board, can even beam a wide smile through his goatee when Broad hits him on the shoulder. One over remaining in the day. If Rahat Ali does his job properly, Misbah will return in the morning.

  6. Postpublished at 18:25 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Phil Tufnell
    Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special

    Chris WoakesImage source, Getty Images

    England will be absolutely delighted with that wicket otherwise it was looking ominous.

  7. Pak 282-5 (Woakes 17-4-45-3)published at 18:23

    We do have a nightwatchman, but it's Rahat Ali, promoted all the way from number 11. Looking again at the wicket, Asad Shafiq was caught in 17 minds. By the time he decided to withdraw the bat, it was too late. It was the tiniest deflection off the very bottom of the willow. Still Pakistan's day, just, but one more would make it pretty even.

  8. Postpublished at 18:21 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Phil Tufnell
    Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special

    Well played Shafiq. Woakes is becoming England's go-to guy. It looked very simple for the Pakistan batsmen. Woakes has come on and got the ball to swing. I think Shafiq actually tried to leave that ball.

  9. wicket

    WICKETpublished at 18:19

    Shafiq c Bairstow b Woakes 73 (Pak 282-5)

    There it is! From nowhere, England have the breakthrough, that man Chris Woakes striking again. We talked about the ball not swinging, but Woakes is immediately getting movement in the air. Asad Shafiq tries to leave, but can't get the bat away quickly enough. Off the toe of the bat, Jonny Bairstow diving forward to take the catch. How England needed that.  

  10. Postpublished at 18:18 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Phil Tufnell
    Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special

    It's almost as if Misbah is having a net. The new ball has done nothing. It swung a bit after lunch, but that's it.

  11. Pak 282-4 (Misbah 110, Shafiq 73)published at 18:17

    Misbah still trucking, taking advantage of the slightest hint of width from Ball and guiding for four behind square on the off side. We've barely seen the ball wobble in the air all day. I wonder what James Anderson might have done? Mohammad Amir, by the way, has his whites on. Nightwatchman? 

  12. Postpublished at 18:16 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Henry Blofeld
    BBC Test Match Special

    The way Misbah dealt with Moeen, you've never seen reverse sweeps played with such authority and control.

  13. Pak 278-4published at 18:14

    Evening sunshine at HQ, Stuart Broad padding towards Shafiq in front of a crowd that seems to have had the wind sucked from its sails. Thomas the pigeon remains, while the new ball is moving as much as Uluru. Only 15 minutes or so left, we're going to lose overs today. England's rate has been awful.

  14. Postpublished at 18:12 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Phil Tufnell
    Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special

    I think Misbah's not got many hundreds from batting at number five because he's had to bat with a very brittle Pakistan tail.

  15. Pak 270-4 (partnership 140)published at 18:10

    It's been an eye-opening first day of Test cricket for Jake Ball. A first wicket, yes, but also a lesson in toil on a featherbed against a batsman who would rather eat his own face then get out. Nothing doing with this new nut. In other news, I'm told there was a Pokemon just outside our office, whatever that means.

  16. Postpublished at 18:07 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Michael Vaughan
    Ex-England captain on BBC Test Match Special

    If anyone can go and have dinner with Misbah... if you can get the subject away from cricket for five minutes, you've done very well. We try and chat about things like football, but two minutes later it's back to cricket.

  17. Pak 264-4published at 18:06

    Two slips in place, but it doesn't matter what you bowl to Misbah at the minute. New ball, old ball, Alan Ball, Cannon and Ball. No swing, the skipper still dead-batting the straight ones and tickling the leggy ones. For England, that over showed a depressing lack of life.   

  18. Postpublished at 18:03 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

    Phil Tufnell
    Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special

    Misbah just never got out of cruise control did he? He did exactly the same against England in the UAE as well.

  19. Postpublished at 18:03 British Summer Time 14 July 2016

  20. Pak 267-4published at 18:03

    Watch this. Just watch it. Misbah reaches a century then celebrates with press-ups. Brilliant.