Not outpublished at 14:42 British Summer Time 7 August 2020
Yep, Broad safely had bat and foot in his crease. On we go.
Broad, Stokes & Woakes take two wickets each as Pakistan close on 137-8
England bowled out for 219 - conceding first-innings lead of 107
Pope top-scores with 62 as six wickets fall to leg-spin
First Test, day three, Emirates Old Trafford
Watch Today at the Test at 19:00 BST
Amy Lofthouse and Kal Sajad
Yep, Broad safely had bat and foot in his crease. On we go.
Archer slaps it back towards the bowler, Shadab gets a hand on it and the ball clatters into the stumps at the non striker's end. They're going upstairs but I think Broad was in.
It is indeed the first time we're seeing the young leg-spinner Shadab Khan. He's an incredible limited-overs cricketer, still to really make a name for himself in the Test arena.
Jofra Archer shows he is no mug with the bat as makes some space and smashes through extra cover for four.
Michael Vaughan
Ex-England captain on BBC Test Match Special
If you're Jimmy Anderson, you'd get your gloves on and start edging your way to the staircase. It might not be long.
Three singles from a Yasir Shah over. Shadab Khan looks to be limbering up. Will we have spin from both ends?
#bbccricket
Howard Horner: Yasir's on fire, Silverwood is terrified...
Simon Mann
BBC Test Match Special
Jofra was ambling a bit there.
The single was always on as Broad clipped one to the leg side, Archer, albeit rather nonchalantly, got his bat in on time. But Pakistan are on it with their fielding this afternoon.
Pakistan ask the question. Is this a run-out? Has Archer made his ground? I think he has.
Michael Vaughan
Ex-England captain on BBC Test Match Special
They have to bounce Stuart Broad. You can't make life comfortable for him.
Shaheen Afridi comes into the attack and he's greeted with three boundaries by Stuart Broad. The first is a clip down to fine leg, the second is an inside-edge again down to the same part of the ground. But the third, oh my, an almighty slap through mid-on.
Important runs for England?
Stephan Shemilt
BBC Sport at Emirates Old Trafford
England having their belly tickled by a Pakistan leg-spinner is making me feel like it's the 1990s again. Bit of Oasis (it is Manchester), Jolly Rancher sweets, Sunny D, Atlantic 252 on the radio.
Andy Zaltzman
Test Match Special statistician
Yasir Shar has taken three wickets for four runs in the four overs he's bowled since lunch.
Archer 6, Broad 0
In comes Stuart Broad. There's a leg-slip, conventional slip and short-leg in place as Broad sees off the over.
Pakistan are all smiles. All of England's hard work in the morning session has been undone by Yasir Shah.
Michael Vaughan
Ex-England captain on BBC Test Match Special
Yasir Shah has just got into rhythm. That was too quick for Woakes. Clever bowling. He has been so much better since lunch.
Simon Mann
BBC Test Match Special
That kept a bit low but it went quickly off the pitch, and Woakes was hanging back.
Woakes b Yasir 19 (Eng 170-8)
Those Pakistan fans will be blowing the horn and beating the drum a little bit louder as Yasir Shah strikes yet again.
It's a straighter, quicker delivery, Woakes looks to pull mid-wicket and is beaten completely, the ball hitting the middle of middle stump.
This could potentially be a match-winning spell from Yasir.
Stephan Shemilt
BBC Sport at Emirates Old Trafford
These Pakistan fans are at Old Trafford tram station, a horn and a drum between them. It's fair to say they aren't quite providing the same melody as the saxophone player we had during the Windies Tests. I doubt they can see the cricket. For all they know, England are crashing it to all parts.
Simon Mann
BBC Test Match Special
That's twice now that there has been some confusion between these two bowlers, who are being asked to dig England out of trouble with the bat.
It's quickie to quickie now.
Naseem Shah bowls a yorker length, just outside off and Jofra Archer manages to squeeze it through the cordon for two runs.
The Pakistan wonderkid has the ball talking, getting one to nip into Archer's midriff. The England man manages to chop his bat down in time and there's an optimistic appeal, as there often is, by Naseem.