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Match Report:

Scorecard

Superb Azam, Rizwan put England to sword

Pakistan openers put on unbroken double-century stand to level series and hand visitors a first-ever 10-wicket defeat

A superb 200-run partnership between centurion Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan helped Pakistan level their T20 series and inflict England's first 10-wicket defeat in the format.

The tourists were more than happy after posting 5-199 in Karachi. Captain Moeen Ali starred with 55 not out in 23 deliveries, but his side were comprehensively outclassed by Pakistan's openers.

Babar made a mockery of questions over his scoring rate at the Asia Cup, hammering 110no from 66 balls, and Rizwan smashed an unbeaten 88 as they shared nine sixes and 16 fours.

England will be concerned about the lack of incisiveness from their bowling attack, but the two chances they did generate against Rizwan were squandered as Alex Hales dropped him on 23 and Phil Salt spurned a stumping on 32.

They were made to pay as Pakistan won with three balls to spare.

England started well after winning the toss, Salt and Hales pumping 42 off the first five overs, including one six apiece as they set the tone for a high-scoring evening at the National Stadium.

Shahnawaz Dahani put a serious dent in their progress in the sixth over with two wickets in as many balls. Hales, fresh from his comeback 50 on Tuesday, had his bails clipped by an in-cutter on 26 before Dawid Malan was bowled round his legs for a golden duck.

The hat-trick ball was well directed by Dahani but well defended by Ben Duckett, a rare show of deference in an assertive knock of 43 in 22 balls.

He showed off his range with a couple of deft scoops over the keeper, nailed his reverse sweeps and at one stage took four boundaries in eight balls.

Salt had slowed enough to make his dismissal by Haris Rauf only a minor setback but when Duckett was bowled in the next over, attempting to flick Mohammad Nawaz over fine-leg, it felt more significant.

But England went even harder, Harry Brook making a handy 31 before paying the price for an ill-judged ramp and Moeen laying in some big hits. 

The skipper launched Usman Qadir for consecutive sixes and ended the innings with two more as he powered his team to a substantial total.

Pakistan knew they would rely heavily on their elite opening duo and Babar and Rizwan kept pace with a demanding asking rate from the off as they tore into four different bowlers in a chaotic powerplay.

Seamers David Willey, Sam Curran and Luke Wood all took some blows but Liam Dawson was unfortunate when he drew a skier from Rizwan, only for Hales to juggle it at mid-off before putting it down.

Rizwan launched the next ball for six. Adil Rashid came close to bailing out Hales when his first delivery ripped past Rizwan's outside edge as he left his crease, but Salt's glovework let him down.

Having scored 87 in the first half of the chase, Pakistan still needed another 113 in the second half but never looked back as both batters sprinted to half-centuries.

Moeen brought himself on for the 13th over and was flogged for 21, Babar swiping two big sixes and Rizwan adding another. Two more followed as England's banker, Rashid, failed to stem the flow.

Babar's hitting became more and more consistent and he overtook his partner to reach a second T20 hundred from just 62 deliveries. Wood shipped 17 from the penultimate over, allowing Babar to finish things with three balls left.

Moeen insisted a one-over "gamble" on his own off-spin was the deciding moment.

"The momentum changed when I bowled my over. That really gave them the belief and after that they were almost unstoppable," he said.

"I felt like it was under control for most of it. I genuinely feel my over lost the game for us. That was a gamble on my part.

"I went to try and get a wicket, almost buy a wicket. Obviously it didn't work and that's when Pakistan really won the game.

"We dropped a big catch, obviously. You can't afford to drop them and you can't afford to bowl an off-spinner to them at such a big time."

England do not have long to lick their wounds, with back-to-back fixtures meaning the third of the seven games takes place on Friday night.