From NZC:
New Zealand A have a tall order if they are to pull off a tour-ending victory against Pakistan A in Abu Dhabi.
The hosts will start day four on 53 for one in their second innings, holding an overall lead of 100.
With the pitch still playing comfortably, New Zealand's bowlers will need to produce a top class display if they are to have a chance of pressing for a winning position.
New Zealand started day three at 141 for two and got through a solid day's batting before declaring at 380 for eight, trailing Pakistan A by 47 runs.
The star turns were captain Jeet Raval, teenage allrounder Rachin Ravindra and, using more direct methods, seamer Neil Wagner.
His eighth first-class 50 included four sixes, three of them clubbed over long on off Pakistan's most successful bowler, left arm spinner Mohammed Asghar.
Raval, starting on 67, got to 97 before edging a short ball from Asghar, attempting a forcing shot into the onside.
The left-hand Test opener had spent 5 hours and 20 minutes at the crease in an ideal preparation for the first Test against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi on Friday, November 16.
Ravindra showed his class in a tidy 64 before being beaten and bowled by the second new ball.
The pair had added 69 for the third wicket and there were further useful stands between Ravindra and Tom Blundell of 52 for the fourth wicket and 58 between Wagner, who finished on 53 at the declaration, and Scott Kuggeleijn for the eighth wicket.
Blundell, Glenn Phillips and Tom Bruce all contributed twenties.
Asghar finished with four for 127 in a marathon display to keep the batsmen honest.
Needing early success when they declared, New Zealand were immediately buoyed by removing Shan Masood, whose last three innings against them had produced 168, 100 and 73, for 11.
He edged Logan van Beek to first slip where Raval took his third catch of the match, above his head, in the seventh over.
However seamer van Beek was gone before stumps, suffering a shoulder injury in his fifth over.
The odds are heavily leaning to a draw, but New Zealand, who had Pakistan in trouble early in the first innings, will be aiming to put a final squeeze on in the first session and hope to give themselves a chance of ending the tour on a spectacular note.
