“Realistically, it’s going to be a tough chase”: England batting coach Paul Collingwood on his team’s chances against Pakistan

MULTAN, Pakistan (AP) — Sajid Khan dug in for 22 invaluable runs in the second innings and helped swell Pakistan’s lead to 296 before the home team was bowled out for 221 late in the final session on Thursday.

Off-spinner Shoaib Bashir (4-66), effective against the left-handers, and Jack Leach (3-67) took the bulk of the wickets and Brydon Carse grabbed 2-29 with his reverse swing.

Pakistan was 231 runs ahead when Mohammad Rizwan (23) edged Carse into the slips in the final session. But Khan showed plenty of grit and shared a 65-run ninth-wicket stand with Salman Ali Agha, who profited from dropped catches on 4 and 6, and scored 63 off 89 balls.

Carse was twice on the receiving end in the space of three balls when, first, Jamie Smith dropped a regulation catch of Agha, and then Joe Root, fielding close in the slips cordon with his helmet on, couldn’t grasp an edge to his right.

“Realistically, it’s going to be a tough chase,” England batting coach Paul Collingwood said. “We can see (the pitch is) doing plenty for the spinners, there’s a lot of cracks. But we know this team is capable of (doing) some special things … it will be one hell of a chase, something we will relish and try to go for.”

England was batting at the start of the day and resumed on 239-6 before finishing its first innings on 291, trailing Pakistan by 75.

Carse holed out in the deep hitting Khan on the leg side.

Ali (3-101) picked up his 50th test wicket when Smith (21) couldn’t clear the fielder at long-off.

Khan then clean bowled Matthew Potts, who walked across his stumps but the ball zipped between the batter’s legs and knocked back the stumps.

Leach hit a run-a-ball 25 and added 29 runs for the last wicket with Bashir before Khan folded up the innings when Bashir’s extravagant swipe against the off-spinner hit the toe-end of his bat and flew to short mid-wicket.

Bashir sliced through the Pakistan top order in the first session. Left-handers Saim Ayub and captain Shan Masood were caught close to the wicket and Abdullah Shafique feathered a catch down the leg-side to the off-spinner.

Kamran Ghulam (26), who made a dream debut hundred in the first innings after he replaced out-of-form Babar Azam at No. 4, and Saud Shakeel (31) were prised out by leg before wicket decisions while attempting sweep shots against Leach.

Although England kept on coming hard at Pakistan’s batters, Agha’s two let-offs beside Khan’s determined batting allowed Pakistan to set up a challenging target.

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