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Pak-England Test: Pakistan lost nine wickets

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Multan: Pakistan’s batting continues against England with the loss of nine wickets on the second day of the Multan Test.

The first match of the series consisting of three Test matches between Pakistan and England teams is being played in Multan, where the batting of the national team continues on the second day of the game.

Saud Shakeel and Naseem Shah started their incomplete innings for Pakistan on the second day.

Match Day 1

National team captain Shan Masood won the toss and decided to bat first himself and despite Saim Ayub returning to the pavilion for just four runs, Abdullah Shafiq and Shan Masood showed responsible batting.

Abdullah Shafiq and Shan Masood made an important partnership of 253 runs, during which both the batsmen also completed their centuries. Shaan scored 151 runs and Abdullah returned to the pavilion after scoring 102 runs.

Former captain Babar Azam failed to regain his lost form even on a good batting wicket, and returned to the pavilion with 30 runs moments before the end of the first day.

For England, Gus Atkinson took two wickets, Chris Woakes and Jack Leach took one wicket each.

Pakistan Playing XI

Shan Masood (c), Saim Ayub Abdullah Shafiq, Babar Azam, Saud Shakeel, Muhammad Rizwan (wk), Salman Ali Agha, Aamir Jamal, Shaheen Shah, Naseem Shah and Abrar Ahmed.

England Playing XI

Ollie Pope (c), Zac Crawley, Ben Duckett, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (wk), Chris Woakes, Gus Atkinson, Brayden Carrs, Jack Leach and Shoaib Bashir.

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Pak-Eng Test Day2: Pakistan complete 350 runs

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Multan: On the second day of the Multan Test, Pakistan is batting against England and the national team has scored 346 runs for the loss of four wickets.

The first match of the series consisting of three Test matches between Pakistan and England teams is being played in Multan, where the batting of the national team continues on the second day of the game.

Saud Shakeel and Naseem Shah started their incomplete innings for Pakistan on the second day.

Match Day 1

National team captain Shan Masood won the toss and decided to bat first himself and despite Saim Ayub returning to the pavilion for just four runs, Abdullah Shafiq and Shan Masood showed responsible batting.

Abdullah Shafiq and Shan Masood made an important partnership of 253 runs, during which both the batsmen also completed their centuries. Shaan scored 151 runs and Abdullah returned to the pavilion after scoring 102 runs.

Former captain Babar Azam failed to regain his lost form even on a good batting wicket, and returned to the pavilion with 30 runs moments before the end of the first day.

For England, Gus Atkinson took two wickets, Chris Woakes and Jack Leach took one wicket each.

Pakistan Playing XI

Shan Masood (c), Saim Ayub Abdullah Shafiq, Babar Azam, Saud Shakeel, Muhammad Rizwan (wk), Salman Ali Agha, Aamir Jamal, Shaheen Shah, Naseem Shah and Abrar Ahmed.

England Playing XI

Ollie Pope (c), Zac Crawley, Ben Duckett, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (wk), Chris Woakes, Gus Atkinson, Brayden Carrs, Jack Leach and Shoaib Bashir.

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Pakistan resume innings on second day of first Test against England

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Pakistan resume innings at second day of Test match against England. — PCB

Saud Shakeel and Naseem Shah continued their partnership as Pakistan resumed the innings on second day of the first Test against England at Multan Cricket Stadium on Tuesday. 

The national side had suffered an early blow with opener Saim Ayub getting caught behind against Gus Atkinson at just four runs after winning the toss and electing to bat first on the first day. 

However, Masood and opener Abdullah Shafique’s 114-run stand steered the national side to 122-1 at lunch.

The match ended at 328/4 with Shakeel scoring 35 and Shah at 0 on the crease.

The match, first in the three-match series, is being played at the Multan Cricket Stadium and is part of the ICC World Test Championship 2023-25.

During the match on Monday, Masood was given a lbw after a delivery by Brydon Carse in the debutant seamer’s second over, but the batter reviewed the decision and got it overturned after replays confirmed the ball had pitched outside the leg stump.

Masood went on to take two runs off Atkinson to race to a 43-ball fifty.

Shafique got a reprieve on 35 when he went for a risky single and England’s stand-in captain Ollie Pope’s direct throw narrowly missed the stumps.

Despite missing the stumps, the stand-in captain didn’t give up and dismissed Shafique at 59.5 over, after the player scored 102 runs of 184 balls, with 10 boundaries and two towering sixes.

However, players like Saim Ayub couldn’t do much for the team and ended up making four runs only.

Additionally, the star of the day, Masood was caught by Jack Leach at 62.3 overs, after contributing the most with 151 runs off 177 balls, with 13 shots towards the boundary and two sixes.

Babar Azam aimed for a half century but ended up making runs below 40.

The former white-ball captain made 30 off 71 after five fours, directing towards the pavilion at 84.3 overs after Chris Woakes dismissed the player through a lbw.

Bowling first, Woakes and Leach bagged one wicket each while Atkinson took two wickets.

It is to be noted that England are being led by Ollie Pope in the first Test after the visitors’ captain Ben Stokes was ruled out of the contest due to a hamstring injury in the Hundred League.

Moreover, James Anderson, is not accompanying the team on their tour of Pakistan, as he is participating in the Scotland’s Alfred Dunhill Links Championship.

The last time England were in Pakistan for a red-ball series, they handed a 3-0 defeat to the national side back in 2022.

Before that, the visitors had played 24 Tests in Pakistan, winning just two out of them making the 3-0 win much more remarkable.

Playing XI

Pakistan: Shan Masood (captain), Saud Shakeel (vice-captain), Saim Ayub, Abdullah Shafique, Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan (wicket-keeper), Salman Ali Agha, Aamir Jamal, Shaheen Afridi, Naseem Shah, Abrar Ahmad

England: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope (captain), Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith, Chris Woakes, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Jack Leach, Shoaib Bashir

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Masood, Abdullah centuries lift Pakistan to 328-4 in first England Test

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Multan (AFP): Skipper Shan Masood and opener Abdullah Shafique both cracked centuries as Pakistan scored an impressive 328-4 on the opening day of the first Test against England in Multan on Monday.

Masood’s brilliant 151 was his first hundred for four years, while Shafique also returned to form with 102 as the pair put on a solid 253-run stand for the second wicket after Pakistan won the toss and batted.

England, led by Ollie Pope in the absence of the injured Ben Stokes, briefly fought back when they removed both Masood and Shafique in the space of just two runs in the third session.

The visitors then took the second new ball at 308-3 and dismissed Babar Azam, trapped leg-before by fast bowler Chris Woakes for 30. Saud Shakeel was unbeaten on 35 at the close of play, with nightwatchman Naseem Shah yet to score.

Captain Shan Masood scored his first century in four years to lift Pakistan to 233-1 at tea on the opening day of the first Test against England on Monday.

The 34-year-old left-hander was unbeaten on 130 and opener Abdullah Shafique was on 94 as the pair put on a brilliant unbroken 225 for the second wicket after Pakistan won the toss and chose to bat.

Masood had been under pressure to make runs, with his last hundred coming against the same opponents at Manchester in 2020 — 14 Tests and 27 innings ago.

He pushed England fast bowler Chris Woakes for a single to complete his fifth Test hundred off just 102 balls with two sixes and 11 fours in a dominant display of batting.

Shafique was equally assured as the pair made England’s three-pronged pace attack and two spinners toil on a batting-friendly Multan stadium pitch.

Shafique has so far hit 10 fours and a six.

At lunch, Masood and opener Abdullah Shafique hit half-centuries to guide Pakistan to 122-1 at lunch on the opening day of the first Test against England.

Batting first after winning the toss on a greenish-looking pitch, Pakistan lost opener Saim Ayub for four before Masood with 61 not out and Shafique, who was unbeaten on 53, steadied the innings at Multan cricket stadium.

England took a wicket in the fourth over when fast bowler Gus Atkinson forced Ayub to glove a shorter ball down the legside to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith with the total on eight.

The visitors thought they had a second wicket when pace bowler Brydon Carse, on debut, trapped Masood in front on 16 and umpire Kumar Dharmasena gave the captain out lbw.

But a review showed the ball had pitched outside the leg stump.

Masood went on the attack against Shoaib Bashir, hitting the off-spinner for four boundaries, before two more off Atkinson took him to his 11th Test fifty.

Shafique, who survived being run out on 34 when Ollie Pope missed the stumps with his diving throw with the batsman short of his ground, smashed two fours and a six off Bashir to reach his sixth Test half-century.

In all, Shafique has cracked five fours and a six and Masood has hit seven fours.

Both teams have picked three fast bowlers and two spinners, hoping that the pitch will offer new ball help to the seamers before taking spin later in the match.



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UFC 307 live: Pereira vs. Rountree results and analysis

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The fight went a bit longer than expected, but Alex Pereira defended his light heavyweight championship against Khalil Rountree Jr. in the brawl of the UFC 307 main event in Salt Lake City. Rountree was valiant and brave into the championship rounds, but Pereira broke the challenger down and the fight was stopped in Round 4.

In the co-main event, Julianna Peña became a two-time champion after defeating Raquel Pennington by split decision (48-47, 48-47, 47-48) to win back the women’s bantamweight title. Could Kayla Harrison, who defeated Ketlen Vieira earlier in the night, be next for Peña?

Andreas Hale, Brett Okamoto and Dre Waters break down all the action from UFC 307.

Watch the replays of all UFC 307 fights on ESPN+: Get ESPN+ here.

There’s also FightCenter, which offers live updates for every UFC card.

Light heavyweight championship: Alex Pereira (c) def. Khalil Rountree Jr.
Women’s bantamweight championship: Julianna Peña def. Raquel Pennington (c)
Men’s bantamweight: Mario Bautista def. José Aldo
Middleweight: Roman Dolidze def. Kevin Holland
Women’s bantamweight: Kayla Harrison def. Ketlen Vieira
Welterweight: Joaquin Buckley def. Stephen Thompson
Strawweight: Iasmin Lucindo def. Marina Rodriguez
Lightweight: Alexander Hernandez def. Austin Hubbard
Middleweight: Cesar Almeida def. Ihor Potieria
Light heavyweight: Ryan Spann def. Ovince Saint Preux
Strawweight: Tecia Pennington def. Carla Esparza
Welterweight: Court McGee def. Tim Means
(c) = defending champion

The women’s bantamweight division has become much spicier over the past few months.

UFC 307’s co-main event will feature a fight between two competitors from the 2013 “The Ultimate Fighter” when Raquel Pennington defends her women’s bantamweight championship against former champion and TUF winner Julianna Peña. The bad blood between the two spilled over at the pre-fight news conference on Thursday, when the two traded barbs.

While the Pennington-Pena rivalry is contentious, the straw that stirs the drink in the 135-pound division belongs to Kayla Harrison, whose arrival in the UFC this year has ruffled a few feathers. The two-time Olympic gold medalist in Judo and two-time PFL lightweight tournament champion set her sights on becoming the next bantamweight champion and plans to take out Ketlen Vieira on Saturday to be the next in line.

“It’s only a matter of time,” Harrison said. “I am the uncrowned queen.”

As the three women traded verbal jabs, Vieira refused to be a bystander and injected herself into the fray, reminding Harrison not to overlook her.

“I hope you have the stamina to fight me. You don’t know what’s coming for you,” Vieira said.

But it would be Harrison who would have the final word for the women on the dais.

“Here’s the difference between me and all of these girls,” Harrison said. “I come here and they complain. … If this was my division and I was the champion I would say ‘Come the f— over and I’ll show you who is champion!'” — Andreas Hale

How Rountree wins: He has to come out guns blazing early. Use that explosive power to get the job done early. He can’t allow the fight to get into the later rounds where his adrenaline will die down and the technique can get sloppy, which Pereira will exploit. He has to believe in himself and can’t get complacent.

How Pennington wins: Be smart and calculated. Don’t be surprised if she adds takedowns to her game plan against Peña. Pennington is also a big body at 135 pounds with great balance and she is really heavy if she gets on top of you. Her striking will also be key. She uses different angles well, making it hard to predict where the punches and kicks are coming from.

Read the story.

Six years ago, Khalil Rountree Jr. went toe-to-toe in the Octagon with Gokhan Saki, a former world kickboxing champion — an ill-advised strategy. But Rountree knocked him out.

“Khalil Rountree Jr. shutting everybody up,” Joe Rogan said at cageside, “including us.”

Rountree could do the same against Alex Pereira on Saturday. Rountree and his coach, John Wood from Syndicate MMA, have welcomed the challenge of a kickboxing match with Pereira, a multiple-weight champion in both kickboxing and MMA.

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When Alex Pereira defends his UFC light heavyweight championship for the third time on Saturday, it will have been just 99 days since he made his second title defense in late June. Pereira, who faces Khalil Rountree Jr. in the UFC 307 main event, is not one to sit idle. He made his first defense of the belt in April, only 77 days before his second.

To put Pereira’s full-sprint run of championship activity in perspective, consider that of the other three UFC champs who have a fight currently booked, not one will step inside the cage having competed within the past 250 days. When Jon Jones puts his heavyweight title on the line in November, it will have been 580 days since he last fought.

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Real or not: Pereira-Rountree is the most entertaining fight at UFC 307.

Very real. This fight wasn’t made because Rountree necessarily earned it. This fight is all about Pereira making yet another quick turnaround against an opponent who will stand and bang with him.

Read the story.

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