England beat Pakistan to win T20 series

KP is the nuts: Pietersen the hero again as England win tense thriller against Pakistan to clinch T20 series

Kevin Pietersen's continued good form helped England to a thrilling five-run victory and 2-1 Twenty20 series success over Pakistan to conclude their tough tour of the United Arab Emirates.

Pietersen's unbeaten 62 underpinned only a vulnerable 129 for six, and although Pakistan looked sure to complete the chase with ease at one stage, England's bowlers dug in to sneak the spoils.

Saeed Ajmal's four for 23, and the economical back-up spin of Mohammad Hafeez and Shahid Afridi, stalled England's momentum after Stuart Broad chose to bat first on an awkward surface at the Zayed Stadium.

Hands on the trophy: England won the Twenty20 series against Pakistan 2-1

Hands on the trophy: England won the Twenty20 series against Pakistan 2-1

Their total lacked a double-figure score between numbers three and six as Ajmal, their scourge throughout here, finished his eight weeks' work with 39 wickets.

It was only in company with fellow opener Craig Kieswetter and then Samit Patel that Pietersen managed to dominate, but he nonetheless hit six fours and a six from 52 balls.

He alone struck the ball with any regularity and authority as England's batsmen struggled to cope with conditions, and it transpired he had done just enough to help finish an arduous trip on a high.

That'll clinch it: Jade Dernbach celebrates taking the last wicket of Pakistan's Misbah-ul-Haq to win the third Twenty20 match

That'll clinch it: Jade Dernbach celebrates taking the last wicket of Pakistan's Misbah-ul-Haq to win the third Twenty20 match

Knee-sy does it: Dernbach celebrates taking a wicket with the final ball to clinch the match and series

Knee-sy does it: Dernbach celebrates taking a wicket with the final ball to clinch the match and series

It was clear Pakistan did not have an easy chase, but knowing their target and that England had only eight overs of frontline spin seemed a major advantage.

Hafeez was caught-and-bowled by Jade Dernbach for a first-ball duck in the second over, and Awais Zia was unluckily lbw to a delivery from Graeme Swann which turned very sharply from round the wicket but pitched outside leg.

Asad Shafiq's sensible batting got Pakistan within striking distance, though, by the time he was run out unable to scamper an unwise second to deep midwicket.

Swann on song: Graeme Swann celebrates with his team-mates after taking a wicket

Swann on song: Graeme Swann celebrates with his team-mates after taking a wicket

Body on the line: England's captain Stuart Broad is at full stretch to stop the ball as Pakistan's Awais Zia, left, runs between the wicket

Body on the line: England's captain Stuart Broad is at full stretch to stop the ball as Pakistan's Awais Zia, left, runs between the wicket

Two other run-out opportunities evaded England, Zia and Umar Akmal the men to survive.

But Akmal and Misbah-ul-Haq's pursuit then ran out out steam as Broad in particular put the squeeze on, and the Pakistan captain was last out for 28, bowled by Dernbach trying in vain to heave the six needed from the final ball of the innings.

Kieswetter and Pietersen had got England off to a handy start for the third match running, until the former was well-caught at wide long-on by Shoaib Malik in Ajmal's first over.

Kieswetter was already responsible for clubbing 12 runs, culminating in a straight six, from Umar Gul's first three deliveries.

Big leap: England's Jade Dernbach jumps in the air as he celebrates taking the wicket of Pakistan's Mohammad Hafeez

Big leap: England's Jade Dernbach jumps in the air as he celebrates taking the wicket of Pakistan's Mohammad Hafeez

That is out: Pakistan's Shahid Afridi runs out England's Eoin Morgan

That is out: Pakistan's Shahid Afridi runs out England's Eoin Morgan

Cometh the hour: England's Kevin Pietersen was the hero with the bat again as he hit 62 not out off just 52 balls

Cometh the hour: England's Kevin Pietersen was the hero with the bat again as he hit 62 not out off just 52 balls

But neither Ravi Bopara nor Eoin Morgan could get started.

Bopara edged a very good ball from Aizaz Cheema to diving wicketkeeper Akmal.

Then Morgan's nightmare tour ended with one of his worst innings. He somehow managed an acceptable nine from 11 balls, but could easily have been out twice as he mistimed or simply missed before a mix-up with Pietersen saw him run out, sent back for a single.

Jonny Bairstow, hero of the series-levelling win in Dubai two days ago, was also all at sea in the desert this time as Ajmal and Afridi took control.

Ajmal bowled Bairstow, trying to cut the wrong ball. But it was Afridi who dried up the runs most effectively, as England failed to score from 12 of the 24 balls the leg-spinner bowled.

Pietersen lost the strike, facing only 14 of 40 deliveries at one stage, and – until Patel joined him – it was all too much for a succession of new men to the wicket.

Patel struck 12 runs, again including a straight six, from the first three balls of Ajmal's last over. But the off-spinner had the last word, when Patel was stumped, and even Pietersen could not get England significantly above six-an-over until Cheema served him a full-toss which disappeared over midwicket for a maximum from the last ball of the innings.

It was to prove a crucial blow too, one Misbah was singularly unable to match when his team needed it two hours later.

Stuart Broad turns up heat on Andrew Strauss

Broad to turn up heat on Strauss as England prepare for Twenty20 clash with Pakistan

England's unpredictable tour of the
United Arab Emirates ends on Monday night with Stuart Broad looking to join
Alastair Cook in winning a limited-overs trophy against Pakistan and,
perhaps, putting more pressure on Andrew Strauss.

Since Strauss went home in the wake
of Pakistan's 3-0 Test success, England have put their problems behind
them and victory here in the final Twenty20 match would give them an
unlikely limited-overs series double in the absence of their senior
leader.

The heat is on: Stuart Broad seeking limited overs trophy

The heat is on: Stuart Broad seeking limited overs trophy

Strauss will unquestionably be in charge when England name their squad for the Test tour of Sri Lanka on Tuesday.

HOW THEY LINE UP

PAKISTAN: Hafeez, Zia, Shafiq, U Akmal (wkt), Misbah-ul-Haq (capt), Shahid Afridi, Shoaib Malik, Azam, Gul, Ajmal, Cheema.

ENGLAND: Pietersen, Kieswetter (wkt), Bopara, Morgan, Bairstow, Buttler, S Patel, Broad (capt), Swann, Dernbach, Finn.

Umpires: Zameer Haider and Shozab Raza (both Pakistan).

TV: LIVE on Sky Sports 1 from 3.30pm.

But the three-captain system will inevitably raise more question marks over his future unless he ends his near 18-month run without a Test century in Galle or Colombo.

Andy Flower, the man who makes the unique system work by remaining firmly in charge, was strong in his support of Strauss on Sunday but admitted that he still does not know whether it would be better, as national selector Geoff Miller prefers, to have one man in charge of all three teams.

'One's status as a leader doesn't increase or decrease significantly over one series,' said Flower.

'Andrew Strauss is a very fine leader and cricketer and he's done some great things for English cricket.'

But with Cook blossoming as a one-day player and now promoted to the Twenty20 squad as cover here, might it soon be time to hand all three jobs to the Ashes hero

Three's a crowd: Andrew Strauss one of a trio of captains

Three's a crowd: Andrew Strauss one of a trio of captains

'I think the three-captaincy system has worked as well as we could hope,' said Flower.

'You need mature blokes, definitely, and we've got a number of very good people in our group, those three particularly.

'I think we've got to let this play out before I know whether it's better to have one captain or not.'

There are few issues for England to discuss before naming their Test party despite their reverse against Pakistan, with only the injured Chris Tremlett certain to miss out.

The big issue will be whether Eoin Morgan, who has had a wretched tour here, survives the cut.

A personal preference would be for Samit Patel to be selected in Tremlett's place and Jonny Bairstow to be given his squad chance in place of Morgan.

Stuart Broad up for the challenge ahead despite England"s Twenty20 defeat to Pakistan

Broad up for the challenge ahead despite England's Twenty20 defeat to Pakistan

England captain Stuart Broad was not too downhearted after his side slipped to an eight-run defeat against Pakistan in the first Twenty20 in Dubai.

Having gone down 3-0 to Pakistan in the Test series and redeemed themselves with a 4-0 whitewash of their own in the one-day internationals, England are now playing catch-up again in the latest three-match rubber.

Pakistan made a challenging 144 for six having been put into bat, with Shoaib Malik (39) and Misbah-ul-Haq (26 not out) hitting their stride and Graeme Swann returning career-best figures of three wickets for 13 runs in four overs.

Looking good: But England slumped to defeat after seemingly having a stranglehold on the game

Looking good: But England slumped to defeat after seemingly having a stranglehold on the game

England's response got off to a positive start as Kevin Pietersen, promoted to opener in the format, carried over his good from from the ODI series with 33 in 21 balls.

But despite contributions of 39 and 22 not out from Ravi Bopara and Johnny Bairstow, England were constricted by Umar Gul (three for 18) and Mohammad Hafeez (two for 18).

Reflecting on the match, Broad said: 'Pakistan batted quite nicely in the first three or four overs and made it difficult for us.

'Obviously Twenty20 is a very different game to one-day cricket. There's not as much value for holding length and sticking in there. We'll certainly review the game.

Death bowler extraordinaire: Umar Gul ripped through England's tail

Death bowler extraordinaire: Umar Gul ripped through England's tail

'We bowled pretty well and fielded not as well as we have done in the ODIs but we're happy to keep them to 144.'

Opposing captain Misbah, who has enjoyed an up and down trip as skipper across the three formats, was pleased with what he sees as a timely morale boost for his players.

'That really is an important win which we needed for us to get the confidence back, especially the players who were not in good touch or short of confidence,' he added.

'I think we are going to do well in the next two games.'

Stuart Broad happy to have Alastair Cooks in England Twenty20 squad

Broad simply can't get too many Cooks in his Twenty20 squad

Stuart Broad insists he will not be undermined by having another England captain in his side for the last leg of this tour of the unexpected.

A third format of the game means a third England captain, with Broad replacing vanquished Andrew Strauss and triumphant Alastair Cook for three Twenty20 matches against Pakistan.

But Cook has been added to the short-form squad after his two centuries in England’s 4-0 one-day series clean sweep.

Man in charge: England captain Stuart Broad stands with coach Andy Flower and bowling coach David Saker ahead of the first Twenty20

Man in charge: England captain Stuart Broad stands with coach Andy Flower and bowling coach David Saker ahead of the first Twenty20

The question now is if this move is as injury cover, as England insist, or a first step towards Cook taking control in all three forms.

Broad, whose Twenty20 leadership has been limited to two games by injury, is adamant it is simply a case of England taking the sensible option with Ravi Bopara nursing a back injury and others suffering from minor knocks.

‘Cooky’s keen to play Twenty20 cricket and has made that pretty obvious,’ said Broad. ‘He’s been kept on because we’ve got some injury concerns and you can’t go into a series with only one spare batsman.

What it's all about: Broad and Pakistan's captain Misbah-ul-Haq pose with the T20 series trophy

What it's all about: Broad and Pakistan's captain Misbah-ul-Haq pose with the T20 series trophy

‘It was easy for him to stay on for an extra few days and we can have a look at him in the Twenty20 format.’

The new captain does not feel threatened by Cook’s presence. ‘Not at all,’ said Broad. ‘I’ve been entrusted with the Twenty20 job and I’m enjoying it. There’s no need for reassurance about my position.’

It is intriguing, though, to see whether Cook’s reinvention as a one-day player could be extended to the Twenty20 game.

Getting his eye in: Broad prepares for the first Twenty20 in the nets

Getting his eye in: Broad prepares for the first Twenty20 in the nets

‘Whatever is thrown at him he seems able to change his game,’ said Broad. ‘He’s not played a huge amount of Twenty20 for Essex but you can see from his ODI form that he has developed scoring areas. He has played some fantastic one-day innings for us and a lot of it is down to mental strength.’

It would be a surprise, though, if Cook played tonight. He was not at England’s optional practice yesterday and it is more likely Alex Hales will get an extended chance to prove his worth before the World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka this year.

KP-easy does it! Kevin Pietersen comes good with swashbuckling century as England set up whitewash in Dubai

KP-easy does it! Pietersen comes good with swashbuckling century as England set up whitewash in Dubai

England continued their remarkable one-day renaissance in Dubai with a crushing, nine-wicket victory over Pakistan in the third one-day international, as Kevin Pietersen hit back at his critics with an excellent century.

The victory, England's third in a row, means they take an unassailable 3-0 lead in the four game series.

The usual suspects were at the fore once again, with Steven Finn and Stuart Broad taking three wickets each as Pakistan were dismissed for 222, while captain Alastair Cook scored a classy 80 to add to centuries in both of his last two matches. But the real story was Pietersen's return to form.

More to follow…

Got it: Kevin Pietersen celebrates his century

Got it: Kevin Pietersen celebrates his century

Scorecard

Click here for the scorecard from Dubai

Back in business: England's Kevin Pietersen answered his critics in Dubai

Back in business: England's Kevin Pietersen answered his critics in Dubai

Captain marvel: Alastair Cook scored a confident 80

Captain marvel: Alastair Cook scored a confident 80

On the money: Steven Finn celebrates the wicket of Imran Farhat

On the money: Steven Finn celebrates the wicket of Imran Farhat

Golden by: Stuart Broad celebrates the wicket of Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq

Golden by: Stuart Broad celebrates the wicket of Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq

Hunting in a pack: Steven Finn celebrates dismissing Mohammad Hafeez with James Anderson (left)

Hunting in a pack: Steven Finn celebrates dismissing Mohammad Hafeez with James Anderson (left)


Boom Boom: Pakistan's Shahid Afridi offered strong resistance with a solid 51

Boom Boom: Pakistan's Shahid Afridi offered strong resistance with a solid 51

Shot!: Kevin Pietersen hits a boundary

Shot!: Kevin Pietersen hits a boundary

Pakistan v England: Third ODI live scorecard

Pakistan v England: Follow the latest score from the third ODI in Dubai

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England are out to wrap up the series when they take on Pakistan in the third one-day international in Dubai today.

Leading 2-0, victory will hand them the series to make up for the whitewash in the Test matches.

Alastair Cook lost his first toss of the series, though, and England therefore found themselves beginning with ball rather than bat for the first time too.

Click HERE for the live score from Dubai

Pakistan: Mohammad Hafeez, Imran Farhat, Azhar Ali, Asad Shafiq, Misbah-ul-Haq (captain), Umar Akmal, Adnan Akmal, Shahid Afridi, Umar Gul, Saeed Ajmal, Aizaz Cheema.

England: Alastair Cook (captain), Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott, Ravi Bopara, Eoin Morgan, Craig Kieswetter, Samit Patel, Stuart Broad, Graeme Swann, Steven Finn and James Anderson.

Umpires: Aleem Dar, Pakistan, and Simon Taufel, Australia.

TV umpire: Kumar Dharmasena, Sri Lanka.

Match referee: Jeff Crowe, New Zealand.

England beat Pakistan by 20 runs in second one-dayer in Abu Dhabi

Century boy Cook the hero again as England win second ODI with Pakistan by 20 runs

Alastair Cook's second hundred in successive one-day internationals once more underpinned victory as England went 2-0 up with two to play against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi.

Two days after his career-best 137, Cook (102) became the 10th England batsman – and first since Paul Collingwood five years ago – to make back-to-back ODI centuries.

The captain had to work a little harder in England's 250 for four this time – dropped by wicketkeeper Umar Akmal on 28, having chosen to bat first on a slow pitch – and his team did too, to get home by a mere 20 runs, compared to Monday's 130-run win.

All smiles: England bowled excellently at the death to take a 2-0 lead in the four-match series

All smiles: England bowled excellently at the death to take a 2-0 lead in the four-match series

Pakistan v England

Click here for the full scorecard

Cook belied his characteristically
functional style by manufacturing some memorable shots among his 10
fours for a 118-ball hundred, in a match which bore obvious similarities
to the first one of the series here.

Cook's success at the toss, his
man-of-the-match hundred, Ravi Bopara's second consecutive 50 and
identical figures for Steven Finn (four for 34) were constants from the
tourists' first success, on this quick return to the Zayed Stadium.

But for variation it was Samit Patel,
with the ball and in the field, who made perhaps the most telling
interventions as six Pakistan batsmen made double figures but
Misbah-ul-Haq top-scored with just 47.

Cook and Kevin Pietersen shared their second 50 opening stand in as many attempts together.

Early progress was nonetheless
patchy, Cook playing out a maiden to Umar Gul's first over of the match
and needing 10 balls to get off the mark.

Hero: Cook hammered another century as England reached the respectable total of 250

Hero: Cook hammered another century as England reached the respectable total of 250

Hero: Cook hammered another century as England reached the respectable total of 250

But he did so with an especially
well-timed back-foot drive wide of mid-off for four off Aizaz Cheema,
and soon afterwards beat the same fielder with a drive on the up off
Mohammad Hafeez for the second of two successive fours off the
off-spinner.

Shahid Afridi used up Pakistan's DRS
for an lbw against Pietersen which vindicated the umpire and spared the
batsman, but Pietersen could add only three more runs before Saeed Ajmal
hit him in front anyway in his first over with an off-break that beat
the forward poke.

Cook survived when Akmal dropped a
faint edge from an attempted cut at Afridi, but the wicketkeeper did
manage to hold a routine catch to see off Jonathan Trott after a
flat-footed waft at a wide ball from Cheema.

Much therefore depended on Cook and Bopara again, and the Essex pair duly served their country well in a stand of 78.

Bopara would have been run out for
one by a direct hit, taking an unlikely single to Imran Farhat at
mid-on. But he went on to rotate the strike cleverly and push a
run-a-ball tempo throughout.

Up against it: Pakistan now can't win the series after another defeat at the Sheikh Zayed stadium

Up against it: Pakistan now can't win the series after another defeat at the Sheikh Zayed stadium

Even-stevens: Pakistan drew the series level in the final ODI at the Sheikh Zayed stadium

The third-wicket pair's accumulation
peaked with 38 runs in the batting powerplay, only for Cook to go
immediately afterwards when he poked a googly straight back to Afridi.

But Bopara kept his cool, despite
managing only four boundaries – and Eoin Morgan weighed in with the
first six of the series in a partnership of 56 inside the last 10 overs.

The total appeared marginally above par.

It was game on, though, after a
cautious yet effective opening stand of 61 between Hafeez and Farhat
which ended when the former fell to a tame clip to midwicket off James
Anderson.

Stuart Broad was then alert to run
out Farhat by throwing down the wickets in his follow-through as the
batsman scampered back short of his crease.

Patel was responsible for the next
two wickets, Younus Khan lbw pushing forward and Azhar Ali bowled
off-stump as he shaped to cut a quicker ball which also turned a little.

Boom, boom: Bopara scored another half-century but Afridi's cameo lasted just 18 runs

Boom, boom: Bopara scored another half-century but Afridi's cameo lasted just 18 runs

Boom, boom: Bopara scored another half-century but Afridi's cameo lasted just 18 runs

Patel had a hand in the next too, a
crucial one when he dived athletically to his left at cover to take a
very good low catch off the returning Finn to see off the dangerous
Akmal just as Pakistan were gathering momentum in the powerplay.

Misbah-ul-Haq had survived on 29 via a
marginal umpire's call lbw on DRS against Finn – and after Afridi
survived a tough chance at long-off to a diving Broad and then hit 10
from two balls in Patel's last over, English nerves were fluttering
again.

A tight match remained that way right
to the end. But a wicket maiden from Anderson, Afridi bowled heaving to
leg, gave the tourists just enough breathing space as Finn then bowled
Abdur Rehman and in the 48th over Misbah fell to a steepling, swirling
mishit at Broad which was superbly caught by wicketkeeper Craig
Kieswetter.

Four more: Finn ended with figures of 4-34 - exactly the same as the first match in Abu Dhabi

Four more: Finn ended with figures of 4-34 – exactly the same as the first match in Abu Dhabi

Pakistan v England: Second ODI live scorecard

Pakistan v England: Follow the latest score from the second ODI in Abu Dhabi

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England return to the Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi looking for more of the same after beating Pakistan by 130 runs in the ODI series opener on Monday.

Alastair Cook hit a career-best 137 before Steven Finn ripped into the Pakistan top order as England laid down an early marker in the four-match series.

England won the toss and chose to bat.

CLICK HERE FOR THE MATCH SCORECARD

Pakistan
Mohammad Hafeez, Imran Farhat, Azhar Ali, Younis Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq
(capt), Umar Akmal (wk), Shahid Afridi, Abdur Rehman, Umar Gul, Saeed
Ajmal, Aizaz Cheema

England
Alastair Cook (capt), Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott, Ravi Bopara,
Eoin Morgan, Craig Kieswetter (wk), Samit Patel, Stuart Broad, Graeme
Swann, James Anderson, Steven Finn

England v Pakistan, third Test, day four, Dubai

LIVE: England v Pakistan – day four of the third Test in Dubai as it happens

Stay up to date with all the action on
day four of the third Test between England and Pakistan with Sportsmail's
unrivalled team. We'll deliver over-by-over coverage as the action
unfolds at the Dubai International Stadium while our brilliant team of
writers will update with their insights from the ground. Email your thoughts to joe.ridge@dailymail.co.uk or tweet to @joeridge87

England v Pakistan: Essentials

England: Andrew Strauss (c), Alastair Cook, Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, Eoin Morgan, Matt Prior (w), Stuart Broad, Graeme Swann, James Anderson, Monty Panesar.

1st innings: 141

Pakistan: Mohammad Hafeez, Taufeeq Umar, Azhar Ali, Younis Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq (c), Asad Shafiq, Adnan Akmal (w), Abdur Rehman, Umar Gul, Saeed Ajmal, Aizaz Cheema.

1st innings: 99 & 365

Umpires: Simon Taufel and Steve Davis

Click here for a full scorecard

21st over: England 36-0 (Strauss 19, Cook 15)

The players are out in the middle ready to go and it's Umar Gul to open the bowling for Pakistan. Alastair Cook is on strike. Not much carry in this day four pitch for Gul.

5.55am: Remember you can email or tweet your thoughts throughout the day by clicking on the links above.

5.50am: This game could well finish today if Pakistan get England in a spin again. Alastair Cook and Andrew Strauss coped well with the three-pronged spin attack yesterday after Cook was dropped early on off the pace bowling of Umar Gul. If England are to pull of an unlikely win, it may well go into tomorrow at the rate they have been scoring.

5.40am: While we wait for the action to get under way at 6.00am why not have a read of what our team of writers in Dubai made of yesterday's action…

Paul Newman's report on day three is here.

David Lloyd alternative look at the action in Dubai is here.

And Nasser Hussain pleads the case for under-fire England spinner Graeme Swann here.

5.30am: Good morning everyone and welcome to Sportsmail's live coverage of the fourth day of the third Test between England and Pakistan. England will resume on 36-0 chasing 324 to secure an unlikely victory and avoid a series whitewash. Ten wickets for Pakistan would cap a series of dominance by the hosts and would seriously jeopardise England's hold over the world No 1 spot in Test cricket.

Five-for: Monty Panesar kept Pakistan's lead to a minimum

Five-for: Monty Panesar kept Pakistan's lead to a minimum

England v Pakistan, day two, third Test, Dubai

LIVE: England v Pakistan – day two of the third Test in Dubai as it happens

Stay up to date with all the action on day two of the third Test between England and Pakistan with Sportsmail's unrivalled team. We'll deliver over-by-over coverage as the action unfolds at the Dubai International Stadium while our brilliant team of writers will update with their insights from the ground.

England v Pakistan: Essentials

England: Andrew Strauss (c), Alastair Cook, Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, Eoin Morgan, Matt Prior (w), Stuart Broad, Graeme Swann, James Anderson, Monty Panesar.

Pakistan: Mohammad Hafeez, Taufeeq Umar, Azhar Ali, Younis Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq (c), Asad Shafiq, Adnan Akmal (w), Abdur Rehman, Umar Gul, Saeed Ajmal, Aizaz Cheema.

1st innings: 99

Umpires: Simon Taufel and Steve Davis

Click here for a full scorecard

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**Coverage of the day's play begins at 5.30am**

Drama: Sadly there were few in the ground to witness a stunning day of Test cricket

Drama: Sadly there were few in the ground to witness a stunning day of Test cricket