PAK vs NZ, 1st Test: Babar Azam, Sarfaraz Ahmed put Pakistan in controlling position on Day 1

SportsTak

Babar Azam hit his ninth Test ton while Sarfaraz Ahmed's return to Test cricket after nearly four years ended with an impressive 86 as Pakistan overcame a top-order collapse to reach 317-5 against New Zealand in the first Test in Karachi on Monday, December 26.

Babar remained not out on 161 with 16 fours and a six as Sarfaraz — playing his first Test since January 2019 — played well in his long-awaited 50th Test to give Pakistan an early advantage on a slow and dry wicket. They shared a 196-run stand to lift Pakistan from 110-4 before Ajaz Patel (2-91) broke through late in the final session on Day 1 and had Sarfaraz caught in the slip with the second new ball.

The Babar-Sarfaraz show
Patel nearly ended Babar's six hours of batting in the last over, but the Pakistan captain successfully overturned an LBW ruling through a TV referral. Both Babar and Sarfaraz dominated the three spinners and were untroubled against the seam bowling of captain Tim Southee and Neil Wagner in nearly two sessions after New Zealand had made early inroads.

Sarfaraz came good against the spinners with his sweeps and Babar made New Zealand pay a heavy price for letting him off the hook early with his trademark cover drives and flicks on the on-side. Daryl Mitchel dropped a regulation catch when Babar was on 12 as the Pakistan skipper raised his hundred off 161 balls with a six off Michael Bracewell (2-61) over midwicket, just before tea.

Top-order collapse
New Zealand, playing their first test in Pakistan in 20 years, had started well after Babar won the toss and elected to bat on a wicket expected to favour spinners. Patel and Bracewell made an early impact after Southee brought on his slow bowlers as early as the fourth over at National Stadium.

Sarfaraz had to wait for 26 Test matches before finally breaking into the test XI after Pakistan rested all-format regular wicketkeeper-batter Mohammad Rizwan. He made full use of his hometown conditions and rebuilt the innings and even braved cramps after tea while going for a quick single and diving at the non-striker's end.

Patel and Bracewell found plenty of turn in the first hour after Southee lost the toss in his debut as New Zealand skipper. Southee read the slow and dry wicket quickly and brought on his spinners with the new hard ball only three overs old. Patel eventually got the breakthrough off his third ball as Abdullah Shafique (7) was stumped after getting beaten on two successive deliveries from the left-arm spinner.

New Zealand came close to dismissing Sarfaraz on 26, but the batter successfully went for a TV referral after on-field umpire Aleem Dar adjudged him to be caught behind off Southee. Southee was again on the forefront with the second new ball, but Sarfaraz survived another TV referral when New Zealand went for an unsuccessful lbw review.

Shan Masood (3) also tried an over-ambitious shot against Bracewell's off-spin and Tom Blundell got his second stumping before Imam-ul-Haq (24) played a reckless shot and holed out to Southee at mid-off to leave Pakistan struggling at 48-3. It was for the first time in men's test history that the first two batters in an innings got stumped.

Babar raised his fifty off 76 balls when he drove Sodhi through mid-on off the backfoot for his seventh boundary before Southee dismissed Saud Shakeel (22) in the penultimate over before lunch. Shakeel, who scored four half-centuries in England's 3-0 sweep against Pakistan last week, played a loose drive against Southee and offered a regulation catch in the gully just when it looked like the pair had started to rebuild the innings.

Pakistan also brought Mir Hamza into the playing XI after the left-arm fast bowler played his only test against Australia in 2018 in Abu Dhabi, while Imam also returned after missing the last test against England because of a hamstring injury. 

(With PTI Inputs)