Will Jacks
Will Jacks has bowled 33 overs on his debut Test so far
First Test, Rawalpindi (day three of five)
England 657 all out: Brook 153, Crawley 122, Pope 108, Duckett 107
Pakistan 499-7: Babar 136, Imam 121, Shafique 114, Jacks 3-132
Pakistan trail by 158 runs
Scorecard

On the third day of the first Test against Pakistan, England's determination and persistence was rewarded with crucial late-innings dismissals.

The tourists were going to be frustrated by a classy century from home captain Babar Azam.

When Babar slashed Will Jacks to point to depart for 132, James Anderson and Will Jacks removed Mohammed Rizwan and Naseem Shah, respectively.

Pakistan was on 497-9 at the close, still 158 behind.

It wasn't anything more than England deserved on a day when they tried everything to get a chance.

This is the first Test in history where each opener on both sides has made a century in the first day.

Jacks and Jack Leach made their Test debuts and gave England a chance.

Babar's brilliance was followed by the late drama.

England rewarded for long toil

Ben Stokes celebrates
England captain Ben Stokes was rewarded for some innovative fields with four wickets late in the day

The display by England was just as impressive as their record-breaking exploits.

In the last Test at this location, only 14 wickets fell.

England are adamant that they don't play to draw and that their hard work has left them with a good chance of victory.

The absence of Liam Livingstone, who had a knee injury, meant that England's bowlers never lost their discipline.

On Sunday, they will return refreshed and confident that they have wrapped up the Pakistan story.

It's likely to be exciting to watch how England set a target and leave themselves enough time to bowl Pakistan out again.

Brilliant Babar delights Rawalpindi

Babar Azam raises his bat
Babar Azam now averages 88 in nine Tests in Pakistan

As Babar's score grew, so did the crowd, even though only a few spectators were interested in the game.

On the hottest day of the match so far, home fans chanted Babar's name while the English tried to keep their spirits up.

Babar was the most proficient of the Pakistan centurions. He pounced to pull anything short and used his feet against the spinners to get his half-century.

He reached the seventh century of the match with a slap through thecovers.

Babar looked like he was going to bat on. He told Jacks to leave the stadium in silence.

It was the beginning of the end for England as they lost four of their best players.

Early and late success for England

England's effort and creativity never stopped, it was just that their successes came either side of the Babar genius.

As many as seven close catchers were used by Stokes.

Pakistan started on 181-0. Shafique moved from 89 to register his third hundred in only eight Tests, while Imam moved from 90 to get his third ton.

Jacks made his Test debut by getting an edge from Shafique. After bowling with the second new ball, he scurried one into the pads of Azhar Ali, who was unable to make a play.

The mistake Jacks made from Babar will be the most valuable one.

Another sign of England's invention was the fact that Anderson and Jacks both struck in the same over, with Jacks catching Naseem off Anderson's bat and Anderson bowling Rizwan to mid-off.

'We tried to make it fun' - what they said

Joe Root spoke to Sky Sports. All the work we did came to fruition.

It was attritional, that's what I think. We had to be creative and get our rewards at the end.

If you feel like you don't have a chance, then it's very difficult. We tried to make it fun and interesting by getting them to think outside the box.

In the morning, we will try and crash some around and get up to a reasonable total, because we have three big ones to take.

It has been a great day for Pakistan as they have played well. We lost some ground, but we are still in a good spot.

There's a positive approach to it. No one is talking about going for the draw. England will play a good game. We're going to fight it out.