Abdullah Shafique
Abdullah Shafique is on course for a third hundred in only his eighth Test
First Test, Rawalpindi (day two of five)
England 657 all out: Brook 153, Crawley 122, Pope 108, Duckett 107
Pakistan 181-0: Imam 90*, Shafique 89*
Pakistan are 476 runs behind
Scorecard

Pakistan dug in on the second day of the first Test to show how hard it will be for England to win.

At one point, he took an over from Zahid Mahmood for 27, which was an England Test Record.

The 398 runs added in boundary fours and sixes was the most England have ever scored.

For as long as England's batters enjoyed the flattest of pitches, Pakistan's openers made the most of the conditions.

The home side was still 476 behind at the time.

Shafique was lucky not to be caught down the leg side off James Anderson when he was on 89 not out.

This weekend is going to be a bad one for England.

Victory task revealed to England

Ben Stokes looks on as Pakistan's openers run a single
If Abdullah Shafique and Imam Ul-Haq reach their centuries on day three, it will be the first time ever in Test cricket that all four openers have hit centuries in the first innings

The majority of the second day was spent at the traditional pace of Test cricket.

England will have been aware of how good the pitch is for batting, but their time in the field showed the effort it takes to win the game.

A spell of bouncers from the captain himself was one of the highlights of the game. Liam Livingstone jarred his knee in the field and did not bowl, so they may rue not selecting the pace of Jamie Overton.

There is plenty of time for the tourists to win. Pakistan will still be a long way behind even if they bat all day on Saturday.

On a day when lunch was extended, the Pakistan revival gave life to the fans. Every run was cheered with enthusiasm and there were chants of "welcome England" in their first Test in 17 years.

"Pakistan will win" was the chant that moved to "Pakistan will win". It's not out of the question that the match can be saved.

Shafique and Imam dig in

Although England bristled with intent, the two men settled for discipline and patience.

He has averaged 67 in seven previous Tests. The left-handed Imam was happy to muscle the ball through the leg side while he was playing beautiful cover drives.

Both needed moments of luck.

After regular keeper Ben Foakes was ruled out due to illness, Ollie Pope stood in behind the stumps and put down the faint edge of Imam's shot.

Pope did well to gather a Shafique glove down the leg side off Anderson, but replays showed the ball to have bounced, then in the next over Shafique firmly turned Leach into the stomach of short-leg sub fielder.

As England began to tire, both accelerated. The tourists would have been happy for the chance to leave the field and regroup.

England push on for more records

Even if England didn't reach their first-day heights, they still scored 141 runs in 26 overs on Friday morning.

Thursday's batting was controlled aggression, but Friday was often everything-must-go, as evidenced by the first ball of the day hitting Naseem Shah's head for six.

On the first day of his 101, brook took 24 from Mahmood. It was the fifth most expensive over in Test history with two sixes and three fours. The most expensive figures ever by a Test debutant were returned by Mahmood, who took 4-235.

A stand of 65 between Jacks and Robinson carried England past 600.

England had their fifth- highest total of all time by the time Anderson top-edged a sweep.

'Pakistan edge day two' - analysis

Test Match Special is hosted by a former England spinner.

Pakistan's day is today. There was a lot of chaos this morning but they were able to take six of them for a total of 163.

It was a bit of a result as England had mentioned the goal of 750.

It was a very competent display by the Pakistan opening pair as the cricket became more predictable.

The England bowling team did a good job. It was going to be hard for us. You need to take every chance you can get.