Eoin Morgan and Dawid Malan both hit half-centuries, putting on 112 runs together for the third wicket, as England chased down 196 to win and go 1-0 up with one match to play in the series.
Pakistan got off to a good start after being put in to bat first, as Fakhar Zaman and Babar Azam put on their side’s first fifty opening stand in T20Is since 2018. Fakhar eventually fell in the ninth over for 36, with Adil Rashid picking up the wicket.
Rashid struck again a few overs later to remove Babar too, though not before the Pakistan captain had brought up his 14th T20I half-century.
Mohammad Hafeez ensured the start was not wasted however, as he smoked a 36-ball 69, including four sixes, before he fell with just one ball left in the visitors’ innings.
England also got off to an excellent start, as Tom Banton and Jonny Bairstow took on the Pakistan bowlers during the Powerplay. They had taken the score to 65/0 at the end of six overs, but Shadab Khan removed the pair with consecutive deliveries, leaving Morgan and Malan with a lot of work still to do.
Morgan got going relatively quickly though, slog sweeping his seventh ball over the rope for six off Shadab, hitting the same bowler back over his head for four later in the same over.
Pakistan struggled to build any pressure, particularly after Mohammad Amir went off injured after bowling just two overs, and only twice during Malan and Morgan’s 10.2 over partnership did the bowlers manage to bowl consecutive dot balls.
Morgan finally fell for a 33-ball 66, holing out on the leg side, and Moeen Ali fell to a tame shot five balls later to leave England needing 14 runs from the final 14 balls, though with Malan still at the crease.
It was new man Sam Billings who released the pressure though, hitting Haris Rauf for back-to-back fours in the penultimate over to bring the scores level, before guiding a shot off the back foot to point.
Dawid Malan pierced the infield to collect a boundary off the first ball of the 20th over to get England over the line, finishing on 54* from 36 balls.
England now lead the series 1-0 with the final T20I to be played at the same venue on Tuesday, 1 September.