Australia’s captain Pat Cummins (L) celebrates after taking the wicket of Pakistan’s Hasan Ali (R) during the third day of their 3rd Test at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore on Wednesday. LAHORE: Pace spearheads Pat Cummins and Mitchell Starc claimed nine wickets between them and ran through Pakistan’s batting order, bowling out the hosts for 268 to give Australia a shot at a series victory in the third and deciding Test at Gaddafi Stadium here on Wednesday. At stumps on day three, Australia were 11-0 in their second innings with Usman Khawaja on seven and David Warner four. Cummins finished with 5-56 and Starc bagged 4-33 to trigger an afternoon collapse which saw the home team lose their last six wickets off 40 balls with the addition of just 12 runs. Australia were only able to add 11 to a comfortable 123-run first-innings lead as play ended seven overs early due to bad light. The series is Australia’s first in Pakistan for 24 years with security fears scuppering possible tours but the contest has been marred by flat pitches. The first two Tests in Rawalpindi and Karachi ended in high-scoring draws. Pakistan looked well placed with 227-3 at tea, having lost just Abdullah Shafique (81) and Azhar Ali (78) in the first two sessions, but Starc and Cummins wreaked havoc with the second new ball. Starc removed Fawad Alam (13) and Mohammad Rizwan (one), while Cummins bowled Sajid Khan (six) as Pakistan collapsed to 264-6. Pakistan skipper Babar Azam fought a lone battle, scoring 67 runs that included seven boundaries and a six, but wickets tumbled around him with the last four dropping with the addition of a single run. Starc trapped Azam leg-before while Cummins polished the remaining tail. The collapse allowed Australia to cover up their sloppiness in the field after Steve Smith dropped Azam when he was batting on 20. Cummins hoped a good day’s work would help them win the Test. “I thought that we bowled really well,” he said. “We have given ourselves a really good opportunity (to win), really in front of the game and hopefully we will bat well and then take the last ten wickets.” Pakistan came out to bat on the third day at 90-1 and reached 159 at lunch without losing any more wickets, but the second session saw Shafique and Azhar return to the dressing room in the space of 44 runs. Lyon got rid of in-form Shafique in the fifth over after lunch when he forced an edge to wicketkeeper Alex Carey. Umpire Aleem Dar did not raise the finger but a review by Cummins proved successful. Shafique, who hit a century in the first Test in Rawalpindi, batted for 323 minutes, hitting 11 boundaries. Australia took the second new ball after 80 overs with the total on 191-2, and seven overs later Cummins held on to a sharp caught-and-bowled chance to dismiss Azhar. Azhar batted for 337 minutes, hitting seven boundaries and a six in his 35th Test half-century. Australia toiled hard in the morning session and could have had some reward in the last over before lunch when Azhar, on 62, edged leg-spinner Mitchell Swepson, but Smith failed to hold on to the sharp chance at slip.