Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq equalled Viv Richards' record for the fastest ever Test century in the second Test against Australia.
Misbah took 56 balls to reach three figures and was 101 not out from 57 when he declared. Here, Press Association Sport's Tom White analyses the innings.
Scoring shots:
Dots: 22
Ones: 13
Twos: 4
Threes: 2
Fours: 11
Sixes: 5
By bowler:
Steve Smith: 11 balls, 38 runs, two fours, four sixes, strike rate 345.45.
Mitch Starc: 21 balls, 31 runs, five fours, SR 147.62.
Peter Siddle: 18 balls, 21 runs, two fours, one six, SR 116.67.
Mitch Marsh: seven balls, 11 runs, two fours, SR 157.14.
Smith was clearly Misbah's most profitable source of runs, including an early streak of six-six-four-six - though he was dropped second ball off the leg-spinner when on four, with Siddle the guilty party.
Scoring rate:
That onslaught against Smith took Misbah to 28 from nine balls, which became 38 from 13 with back-to-back boundaries off Marsh. Eleven runs in Smith's next over took him to 49 in 18 balls and he was to reach his half-century in a Test-record 21 deliveries, beating Jacques Kallis' mark of 24.
Having got to 69 from 33 he went 11 balls without a boundary, but he ended that run with a six off Siddle and with 90 from 50 he had a chance to break Richards' record outright. Siddle kept him to one from three balls, though, and he needed back-to-back fours off Starc to equal the record.
Main scoring areas:
Misbah hit 24 through both the mid-off and mid-wicket regions, the former consisting entirely of boundaries with three fours and two sixes. His other three maximums went over mid-wicket or mid-on, while 23 runs came through backward point including four fours.