Pakistan three down chasing 160 against Ireland

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DUBLIN: Paksitan top order once again crumbled due to pressure as the national team is chasing 160 in final innings of the historic Test match.

Tim Murtagh got Azhar Ali and Asad Shafiq on the score of 2 and 1 respectively, while Haris Sohail caught out on 7.

In second Innings, Pakistan took remaining three wickets quickly as Ireland got all out on 339.

Earlier, n Monday, Kevin O’Brien became the first Irish batsman to score a century in men’s Test cricket.

Today, Pakistan will be looking to stop the flow of runs from the Irish and take the last three wickets before Ireland can put up a big score.

When the Irish will get down to the pitch today they will be hoping to build on yesterday’s momentum where O’Brien scored an unbeaten 118.

Ireland, who were made to follow-on, were 319-7 at stumps on the fourth day at Malahide – with a lead of 139 runs.

FOURTH-DAY INNINGS:

Ireland started the day on their highly creditable overnight 64 without loss.

But they lost four wickets in Monday’s first session, with left-arm quick Mohammad Amir — who had both openers dropped during a brief spell on Sunday before going off with a knee problem — enjoying a burst of two wickets for no runs in six balls.

It was a heartening sign for Pakistan ahead of their upcoming two-Test series in England that will feature back-to-back fixtures at Lord’s (May 24-28) and Headingley (June 1-5).

Amir, however, repeatedly limped around the field on Monday when he was not bowling.

Ireland resumed with veteran opener Ed Joyce, arguably their greatest batsman of all time, 39 not out and captain William Porterfield unbeaten on 23. At that stage, they were still 116 runs behind.

The last thing Ireland needed was to gift Pakistan a wicket via a runout and yet that is exactly how an opening-stand eventually worth 69 runs ended when Joyce set off for a needlessly tight single before failing to beat Faheem Ashraf’s direct hit from midwicket.

The 39-year-old left-hander was out for 43, including six well-struck fours.

Fear that as soon as Ireland lost one wicket, another might follow quickly were proved correct as 69 for one became 69 for two, with Andrew Balbirnie lbw to Mohammad Abbas for nought for the second time in the match as he completed a pair.

Amir struck with his 29th ball Monday when Niall O’Brien, Kevin’s brother, had his stumps uprooted for a wicket greeted with the bowler’s familiar arms outstretched celebration.

And 94 for three became 95 for four when Amir had Porterfield (32) edging to wicket-keeper Sarfraz Ahmed, the Pakistan captain.

An innings defeat was still a possibility when Amir, given a jail sentence and banned from cricket for five years as a result of his involvement in a spot-fixing scandal during the 2010 Lord´s Test, took his 100th wicket in 31 matches at this level when Gary Wilson was held in the slips by Haris Sohail.

But Thompson’s single off all-rounder Faheem meant Pakistan would have to bat again, while Kevin O’Brien was looking increasingly assured.

Best known for hitting the fastest-ever World Cup hundred, off 50 balls, against England at Bangalore in 2011, Kevin O’Brien made Ireland’s maiden Test memorable with his hundred.

Pakistan took the new ball with Ireland 193 for six but Kevin O’Brien´s response was to clip Abbas for a legside boundary.