Miraz’s 14th Test fifer hands Tigers first-innings lead
Mehidy Hasan Miraz claimed his 14th five-wicket haul in Test cricket as Bangladesh staged a strong comeback to bowl Pakistan out for 386 on Day 3 of the opening Test of the two-match series at Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Mirpur on Sunday.
Miraz finished with figures of 5-102 from 38 overs, helping the hosts secure a 27-run first-innings lead after Pakistan added 207 runs to their overnight score of 179-1.
After enduring a difficult day with the ball on Saturday, pacer Taskin Ahmed struck early to remove Pakistan opener Azan Awais, whose 103 on debut was the highest score of the innings. Taskin then dismissed Pakistan captain Shan Masood for nine in quick succession.
Miraz then took control, dismissing Saud Shakeel for a duck before sending fellow debutant Abdullah Fazal back to the pavilion. Fazal impressed with a fluent 60 and shared a 104-run partnership with Awais. However, his dismissal left Pakistan at 251-5 at Lunch.
Salman Agha and Mohammad Rizwan then steadied the innings with a 119-run stand for the sixth wicket, with both batters bringing up half-centuries.
Left-arm spinner Taijul Islam broke the partnership by dismissing Rizwan for 59, while two overs later Nahid Rana removed Agha for 58 to expose the Pakistan tail.
Miraz then wrapped up the lower order by removing Noman Ali and Shaheen Shah Afridi, before Taijul dismissed Hasan Ali to bring the innings to a close.
The Tigers, having batted just 11 balls before the umpires called off proceedings, finished the day on seven for no loss.
Taijul removes Rizwan to end crucial stand, but Pakistan dominate second session
Left-arm spinner Taijul Islam provided Bangladesh with a crucial breakthrough, but Pakistan edged closer to the Tigers’ first-innings total by the end of the second session on Day 3 of the first of two Tests at the Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium today.
Pakistan dominated proceedings in the second session and looked to pile pressure on the Tigers, but experienced batter Mohammad Rizwan perished off the final delivery of the session after being caught at mid-off while attempting to hit Taijul for a maximum, as the umpires called an early Tea. Pakistan reached 349 for six in 89.4 overs, still trailing by 64 runs after Bangladesh were bowled out for 413 in their first innings.
Rizwan departed for a 79-ball 59, with his dismissal also ending a crucial 119-run sixth-wicket stand with Salman Ali Agha, who remains unbeaten on 55 off 90 deliveries.

Bangladesh will look to wrap up the tail, though it could take some time for play to resume as dark clouds gathered over the stadium and the covers were brought in as a precaution. The threat of rain was also the reason behind the umpires opting for an early Tea.
Azan’s debut century and Bangladesh bowlers’ fightback mark first session
The opening Test between Bangladesh and Pakistan at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium has been unfolding like a shifting tide, with each session swinging momentum like a pendulum.
Day 3 began with Pakistan in command, resuming at 179 for 1, their openers having laid a strong foundation the previous evening. Among them stood Azan Awais, calm and unshaken on 85 overnight, carrying the weight of a debut Test innings that already showed maturity beyond his experience.
The morning light in Mirpur brought expectation—and pressure. Bangladesh searched for early breakthroughs, but Azan refused to yield. He batted with a measured stillness, respecting good deliveries and punishing anything loose.
As the overs ticked by, so did his confidence, until finally, in the 51st over, he brought up a memorable milestone—his maiden Test century on debut—nudging a single off Nahid Rana. In doing so, he etched his name among a select group of Pakistan batters to achieve the feat, and even more rarely, as one of the few to do it away from home.
But Test cricket rarely offers comfort for long.
Bangladesh’s persistence soon paid off when Taskin Ahmed found just enough movement and bounce on a short-of-a-length delivery. Azan, chasing another scoring opportunity, edged behind. Captain Najmul Hossain Shanto held on at slip, and a superb innings of 103 from 165 balls came to an end—an innings built on patience, elegance, and control.
From there, the session tightened like a vice.
Pakistan’s skipper Shan Masood arrived with hope, but Taskin struck again almost immediately, producing a sharp dismissal as Pakistan’s rhythm began to fracture. The momentum shifted further when Mehidy Hasan Miraz entered the contest, trapping Saud Shakeel lbw as the middle order began to unravel.
The resistance briefly flickered through Abdullah Fazal, who compiled a composed 60 off 120 balls, holding the innings together while others fell around him. But even that resistance could not hold indefinitely. Miraz eventually broke through, removing him and deepening Pakistan’s slide.
By lunch, Pakistan collapsed to 251 for 5 from a position of dominance, losing control in a session that belonged firmly to Bangladesh.
What had started as Pakistan’s morning of consolidation turned into Bangladesh’s resurgence. Taskin’s disciplined spell, supported by Mehidy’s control and intelligence, transformed the tone of the match. The green-tinged surface that had troubled Bangladesh on day two now offered them reward, as their bowlers rediscovered rhythm and intent.

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