O'Brien's historic century gives Ireland hope to cause an upset on Test debut
Ireland has an outside chance of winning its inaugural cricket test after Kevin O'Brien led a second-innings recovery with an unbeaten century to lead Pakistan by 139 runs today heading into the final day.
Dublin: Kevin O’Brien became the first Irish to score a Test century and the fourth in the world to register a century on his country’s debut as Ireland staged a remarkable second-innings recovery to give rise to faint chance of an improbable win against Pakistan.
Ireland lead Pakistan 139 runs with three wickets in hand, heading into the final day.
Hours earlier on day four, the Irish were facing the prospect of an innings defeat but they lost only three wickets in the final two sessions to reach stumps on 319-7 following on.
Even a draw would be a marvelous achievement for a country which was awarded Test status only last June.
O'Brien became the first player to score a test century for Ireland and he was there at the close on 118 not out, with his 114-run partnership with Stuart Thompson (53) for the seventh wicket proving decisive. Tyrone Kane was with O'Brien on 8 not out.
Mohammed Amir shrugged off a nagging knee problem to be the pick of the bowlers, finishing the day with figures of 3-57 as he reached 100 test wickets. The left-arm paceman's turbulent test career was interrupted by a jail sentence by an English court and a five-year ban by the ICC for his involvement in a spot-fixing scandal in 2010.
Resuming its second innings on 64 without loss after being asked to follow on and still needing 116 more runs to make Pakistan bat again, Ireland slumped to 123-4 by lunch. When Amir removed Gary Wilson (12), caught by Haris Sohail in the slips, and Paul Stirling (11) was trapped lbw by Mohammad Abbas, Pakistan was close to clinching victory.
O'Brien's circumspect batting - his 118 has come from 216 balls and contained 12 fours - has ensured Ireland stay alive at Malahide.
Pakistan declared its first innings on 310-9 early on day three. The first day was washed out.