This is the half truth only. It would be accurate if cricket was played on a piece of paper, but things are different in actual match scenarios.
Boundaries demoralize bowlers and fielders. It puts bowlers off their lengths, puts pressure on the fielders and more importantly, it forces the captain to change things.
Bowler A goes for 12 runs in an over by conceding 2 runs on every ball. Bowler B goes for 12 runs by conceded two 100m sixes.
If there is a confidence meter, it will be green for Bowler A and red for Bowler B. The captain is more likely to keep Bowler A in the attack.
When Kohli destroyed Rauf with those 2 sixes and changed the equation from 28 in 8 to 16 in 6, it sent Pakistan into panic mode.
On paper, Pakistan was still ahead, but in the middle, it was Pakistan that was on the back-foot and all the momentum was with India.
What transpired in the last over had a lot to do with those 2 sixes. Babar asked Nawaz to bowl medium pace because he was afraid that Kohli and Pandya were going to finish the game off with 3 sixes.
The consequence was that Nawaz ended up bowling two beamers and a wide.
Now imagine a scenario where India would have played less dots in the middle-overs and got more 2s and 3s and the equation was 28 required in 12 balls.
Rauf was able to nail his yorkers and Kohli and Pandya fail to hit boundaries but were able to run 2 on each ball.
The equation would still be the same before the final over: 16 required.
But now, everything is different for Pakistan. The momentum is still with Pakistan. Babar is unlikely to go into panic mode and ask Nawaz to bowl medium, he probably doesn’t bowl two beamers and a wide, and Pakistan probably wins by 4-5 runs.
The way Babar and Rizwan bat, they don’t put any pressure on the bowlers, fielders and captain. He doesn’t need to tinker with his bowling changes and he doesn’t need to change the field because Babar and Rizwan do not force him to think outside the box.
They can bat 10 overs but nothing has changed for the opposition. They don’t have any momentum and the opposition knows that they will not be able to tee off.
If Rohit Sharma bats slowly, he still carries a fear factor because he can explode but Babar and Rizwan don’t carry that fear factor.
The opposition knows that when they get out, the middle-order will arrive with no momentum behind their backs, they will have to start from scratch. They may or may not fire.
Against South Africa, in spite of the low PP score thanks to Babar and the fact that Pakistan had lost 4 wickets, the way Haris played ruffled South Africa’s feathers.
Pakistan had more momentum than they would have with Babar and Rizwan batting and achieving the same score by nudging the ball around.
The high intensity cricket that Haris played made South Africa uncomfortable, and Iftikhar and Shadab were able to carry that momentum forward.
Haris first three balls against Rabada - the 6, 6, 4 - laid the marker and sent a message to South Africa that Pakistan have come out swinging today. That is the brand of T20 cricket that we want to see and that is how this format needs to be played.
Other teams are not stupid. If the Babar and Rizwan template was the way to go other teams would have adopted this approach.
These two have doing this for 2 years and have 50+ averages but other sides are not adopting this strategy. If it worked, England would open with Root, New Zealand would open with Williamson and Australia would open with Smith.
All of them are better and more accomplished batsmen than Babar and Rizwan and they can score 50 in 40 balls day in day out. Babar and Rizwan have the easiest job in the format, but this is not the way how it is supposed to be played.
This drama has come to an end. Pakistan needs to do what other teams are doing and pick two attack-minded openers, but nothing will change because of the three egos: Babar, Rizwan and M. Wasim.