England return to Test cricket for the first time since early June, with Pakistan fresh from a 1-1 series draw against Australia; home captain Andrew Strauss wins the toss and elects to bat at Trent Bridge
England make two changes from their last Test XI which faced Bangladesh, as Paul Collingwood and Stuart Broad return in place of the injured Ian Bell and Ajmal Shahzad; Eoin Morgan gets another chance to impress
Strauss and Alastair Cook are tested early on by some hostile new-ball bowling from Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer, who is left frustrated when keeper Kamran Akmal shells a regulation edge from Strauss
Cook, who failed to reach 30 in either Test against Bangladesh this summer, looks particularly uncomfortable and edges Aamer to Imran Farhat at first slip when he has made eight
Jonathan Trott is given out lbw to leg-spinner Danish Kaneria for 13 by umpire Asoka de Silva - but Trott immediately signals for the Umpire Decision Review System to be invoked; the decision is overturned
But England's delight is brief as Strauss soon falls for 45, edging left-armer Aamer to keeper Akmal, who makes no mistake this time; England are 93-2, and creep to 103-2 by lunch
Pakistan "burn" both their reviews within four overs after lunch as they think they have Kevin Pietersen lbw and then caught behind. The third umpire reprieves him - but cannot intervene when Pietersen is bowled by Asif
However, unlike in England's winter tour of South Africa, the decision review process is displayed on the big screens, to the approval of the Trent Bridge crowd
Trott follows Pietersen when he is given out lbw to Aamer for 38. He calls for a review but is unsuccessful - England are 118-4 and Aamer has his third wicket
But Eoin Morgan rescues England, dominating the fifth-wicket stand with Paul Collingwood and steering his side to 190-4 by tea; the Dublin-born left-hander reaches his maiden Test fifty after the interval
Collingwood and Morgan push on in the evening session as their fifth-wicket stand sails past 100 and England's score well past 200
Collingwood is lucky not to be stumped on 48 as Akmal fumbles an easy chance behind the stumps, not for the first time in a day to forget for the Pakistan gloveman
But Morgan, in only his third Test, is growing in confidence and reaches his maiden Test century in style with a straight six over the bowler's head as Pakistan look increasingly weary in the field
By the close, Morgan has 125, Collingwood 81 and their unbroken partnership of 213 is England's fifth highest stand against Pakistan for any wicket, and fifth highest fifth-wicket stand against any opponent
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