Former England captain Michael Vaughan has the honour of ringing the bell before play. Day two gets under way on time but under cloudy skies which should help swing bowling
England resume on 39-1 but are reduced to 39-2 after three balls when Mohammad Amir produces a superb swinging, seaming delivery to have Alastair Cook caught by wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal
Kevin Pietersen's miserable run of form continues when, first ball, he plays at a wide one and is caught behind for a golden duck as the hugely talented Amir takes his second wicket
Paul Collingwood lasts only three balls before becoming Amir's third wicket - the seamer appeals for a leg before and the referral overturns the umpire's original not out decision. England in disarray on 39-4
And again! Amir conjures up another magical ball which Eoin Morgan edges to second slip for a duck and the 18-year-old now has 4-0 from eight deliveries
Amir could have had another and England could have been 47-6, but Matt Prior survives when replays show a drive to backward point may not have carried to Amir Amin and he is given not out after a referral
Pietersen and Collingwood look on nervously as their team-mates battle to avoid any further losses on what looks to be a critical morning in the outcome of the series, which England currently lead 2-1
Jonathan Trott (centre) shows good technique and resilience to reach 41 not out and help England recover somewhat to 97-5 at lunch, with Prior unbeaten on 21
In the third over after lunch, Amir makes one move away from Prior and the wicketkeeper edges behind, handing Amir his fifth wicket and a deserved place on the prestigious honours board at Lord's
Two balls later and Amir removes Graeme Swann for another duck - the fourth of the innings - with a good length ball which the batsman skews into the hands of Azhar Ali at gully
Amir, playing in his 14th Test, now has 51 Test wickets and, still eight months short of his 19th birthday, has three more wickets than compatriot and coach Waqar Younis managed before he turned 19
Trott continues his gritty resistance and brings up his 1,000th Test run and fifth half century in his 13th Test match as England's eighth-wicket pair bat sensibly to keep the Pakistan attack at bay
The floodlights are now on but number nine batsman Stuart Broad is happy to launch the occasional big blow, including a six off Amir, to help England reach a more respectable 185-7 at tea
Trott holds his nerve to bring up his third Test century, an innings of steel and class. It follows his Ashes ton on debut last year and his double century against Bangladesh at Lord's earlier this year
Broad takes a tumble here but otherwise plays superbly to hit his 1,000th Test run, pass his previous highest Test score of 76 and overtake his first-class best of 91 as his stand with Prior passes 170
Broad completes his maiden first-class century and becomes only the third England number nine to hit a Test century, following Gubby Allen in 1931 and John Murray in 1966
Broad (125 not out) and Trott (149 not out) leave the field at stumps with England 346-7 - the duo need only three more runs to beat England's 79-year-old record stand for the eighth wicket
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