Invited to bat first by Pakistan captain Shan Masood, who won the toss in overcast conditions, Australia reached 187-3 at stumps.
Pakistan squandered a golden opportunity to put Australia on the back foot early, allowing openers David Warner (38 off 83 balls) and Usman Khawaja (42 off 101) to share a 90-run partnership on a pitch offering sideways movement for the seamers.
Warner, in his penultimate test, played a loose shot outside off stump on 38 in the final over before lunch and was caught at slip off the bowling of spinner Agha Salman.
The 37-year-old Warner, who scored 164 in the first test in Perth, was lucky to reach double figures Tuesday. Warner offered a regulation chance on 2 to first slip off the bowling of Shaheen Shah Afridi in the third over, but it was put down by Abdullah Shafique.
Unbeaten on 36 at lunch, Khawaja added six runs to his total before he guided a delivery from Hasan Ali to second slip at 108-2. Khawaja is the leading test run-scorer in 2023 with 1,210 runs at an average of 55.00.
Rain interrupted play 37 minutes before the scheduled tea break, with Australia on 114-2 off 42.4 overs.
Play resumed almost three hours later, rewarding those fans among the first-day crowd of 62,167 at the MCG who had waited patiently for the rain to clear.
Steve Smith was given out LBW on 19 to the bowling of Afridi, but the former skipper successfully reviewed the decision as replays showed the ball was going over the stumps.
On 26, Smith was given not out following a caught-behind appeal from Aamir Jamal, but Pakistan successfully reviewed the decision as replays showed a faint edge.
Smith struck only two boundaries in his 75-ball knock, sharing a patient 46-run partnership with Labuschagne.
Travis Head was unbeaten on nine at stumps to join Labuschagne in the crease when play resumes Wednesday.
Australia named an unchanged side Tuesday and Pakistan made three changes. Wicketkeeper Sarfaraz Ahmed was replaced by Mohammad Rizwan and fast bowler Khurram Shahzad was ruled out due to a rib injury.
Medium-pacer Faheem Ashraf was dropped as Hasan Ali and Mir Hamza returned to the side.
The third test in the three-match series is scheduled to begin Jan. 3 at the Sydney Cricket Ground, where Pakistan won its last test in Australia nearly 30 years ago.
Australia won the first test in Perth last week by 360 runs.
PLAYER OF THE MOMENT: All eyes were on Khawaja amid the ongoing saga surrounding his bid to show support for people suffering during the conflict in the Middle East. Banned by the ICC from using images of a dove and other messages on his equipment, he wore the names of his children Aisha and Ayla on his boots as he strode to the crease with opening partner Warner. Khawaja top-scored on day one with 42 from 101 balls, including five boundaries, before a rash shot brought him undone.
STAT OF THE DAY: Warner’s 38 gave him a total of 18,515 runs across all three formats, sending him past Steve Waugh (18,496) for most runs scored by an Australian in international cricket. But second-placed Warner is still a long way short of Ricky Ponting, who amassed 27,368 runs across his glittering career.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: “While he’ll feel sick about it, it’s not acceptable at international level.” In commentary on the Seven Network, former Australia coach Justin Langer wasn’t impressed with Shafique’s dropped catch when Warner edged star quick Shaheen Afridi to first slip early on.
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