Off-spinner Mehidy Hasan Miraz grabbed five wickets to help Bangladesh skittle Pakistan for 274 on the second day of the second Test in Rawalpindi on Saturday.
The 26-year-old recorded his 10th five-wicket haul in Tests to cap a good day for the tourists, who are looking to win only their third away series.
Bangladesh finished the day on 10-0 despite opener Shadman Islam being dropped by Saud Shakeel off Mir Hamza on the first ball of the innings.
But it was Bangladesh's bowlers who steered them to a strong position.
Mehidy dismissed Pakistan captain Shan Masood for 57 and opener Saim Ayub for 58 after the home team had been well-placed on 99-1 at lunch.
He produced match-turning figures of 4-21 in Bangladesh's 10-wicket win in the first Test a week ago, and snared Khurram Shahzad for 12 and then Mohammad Ali and Abrar Ahmed to end the innings with 5-61.
Mehidy was ably assisted by fast bowler Taskin Ahmed, who took 3-57.
Agha Salman, dropped on nought by Zakir Hasan off Shakib Al Hasan, was Taskin's third wicket after scoring 54 with three boundaries and two sixes.
Taskin said he was happy to be back in the longer format of Test cricket.
"It's a good sporting pitch and we need to bat the full day and get a good lead," Taskin said.
"It's great to be back in red ball (cricket) after one-and-a-half years. I enjoyed that and adapted well."
Salman said the pitch was better than the first Test track and should provide help for the spin bowlers.
"Unlike the first Test, this wicket has lively grass and I believe we have enough runs," he said.
Desperate for a win to level the two-match series, Pakistan started well but lost wickets at regular intervals to slump from a relatively strong 107-1 on a greenish but slow Rawalpindi pitch.
Taskin bowled first Test centurion Saud Shakeel for 16, the left-hander having already survived a dropped catch by Mehidy off Nahid Rana on one.
Babar Azam, Pakistan's best batter, fell leg-before to spinner Shakib Al Hasan for 31, having now gone 15 Test innings without a half-century.
The first day's play on Friday was washed out due to rain but Pakistan shone with solid batting in the first session.
Masood, under pressure after scores of six and 14 in the first Test, hit two boundaries before he fell leg-before to Mehidy in the third over after the lunch break.
Fellow left-hander Ayub was more aggressive, hitting two sixes and four boundaries before he was stumped by wicketkeeper Liton Das off Mehidy.
Taskin, brought in for the unfit Shoriful Islam as Bangladesh's only change, bowled Abdullah Shafique for nought off the sixth ball of the match.
Bangladesh's 10-wicket win in the first Test, also in Rawalpindi, was their first over Pakistan in 14 attempts.
Pakistan made two changes from the first Test, resting spearheads Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah to bring in pace bowler Hamza and spinner Abrar Ahmed.
The two-match series is part of the World Test Championship, with Pakistan now ranked eighth and Bangladesh seventh in the nine-team table.
Naqvi may become ACC President in December
Chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), Mohsin Naqvi, is poised to assume an important new role as the President of the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) starting in December.
Media reports suggest that Naqvi's appointment is likely a result of the ACC's rotational leadership system.
Jay Shah, who had served as ACC Chairman for three consecutive years and received a one-year extension earlier this January, was elected unopposed as the Chairman of the International Cricket Council (ICC).
According to a source who spoke to PTI, a recent meeting among ACC members discussed Naqvi's imminent appointment as president. This new role will let him oversee several major tournaments, including the Asia Cup 2025, which will be held as a T20I event in India, followed by the ODI edition in Bangladesh in 2027.
"When the ACC meets later this year, it will confirm that Naqvi will be the next president for a two-year term... When (Jay)Shah steps down, the PCB chief will take over," the source told PTI.
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