Shan Masood

Shan Masood happy with Pakistan's start

Shan Masood

Masood, Pakistan's opening batsman, was content with how the day progressed for his team despite rain making for a stop-start day. Masood batted out 152 balls and remained unbeaten alongside a fluent Babar at close of play.

The visitors chose to bat first despite overhead clouds and Masood justified the decision by batting through the new ball spell.

Day one was a stop-start affair with the rain lashing out

"When you bat first, as an opening batsman you want to back that decision. Collectively as a team we took that decision of batting first. It was very important to negate that new ball, knowing that England have world-class bowlers, especially in their home turf. And they bowled well, they bowled in good areas, they hardly gave anything away initially," Masood said at the press conference at the end of the day's play.

"As a team, being in that stop-start position is not always easy because you have to switch on, switch off, and switch on back again," he said about the weather. "These are the challenges of Test cricket, especially in England where we all know about the weather. We were very happy that we got through that period and hoping that tomorrow, providing the weather is fine, we make a decent start count.

"Every time there's a stop-start, you have to apply yourself each time, it's like a lunch break or a tea break, or resuming the next day. All the batsmen need some time.

"It was important for us in the final session, with play not looking likely to extend much, to keep the wickets intact. We maintained a reasonable run-rate against a side that looks to dry up the runs. We scored at close to three runs an over, it's a good platform for us to build on," he added.

Masood was solid right through the day but also benefited from a missed stumping chance by Jos Buttler off Dom Bess. The reprieve came right after a three-hour rain delay when Masood was possibly still in a "switch off" state.

Jos Buttler shelves a stumping chance

England's head coach, Chris Silverwood, was quick to throw his weight behind Buttler despite the missed chance.

"No one means to miss them. We’ll continue to give a lot of support, as we do for every member of our squad. Jos is very capable of doing something very special for us tomorrow.

“For us, he’s been tidy there more often than not. We’ll keep giving him the support he needs because we all know he’s capable of special feats," Silverwood said.

Masood, whose stand with Babar, pushed England back on day one, heaped praise on his partner who is in the midst of a purple patch. In his last eight innings, only once has Babar scored below 60. The streak that began in Australia also includes four centuries.

"I've always enjoyed batting with Babar Azam and there's no doubt that it's a good thing for Pakistan that we have a batsman in our side who ranks among the top batsmen in the world, in all three formats.

"Babar's quality is such that ... when the ball slowed down or did not come on to the bat, he had good reflexes and hands that he still punished the bowlers.

"Once he got set, the run-flow increased, and once that happened the opposition got a bit disturbed. Runs are important and the run-rate, from today's perspective and the conditions on offer, we maintained it well, ran well between wickets.

"Babar always looks for the single and a left-right combination is also important. And he is a quality player and when he's batting the opposition is always under pressure."