Pakistan cannot win the ICC World Cup 2023 as they are not mentally and physically strong enough to defeat India, England, Australia and New Zealand

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Many thanks to @Rana for this very detailed analysis of the issues confronting Pakistan as they head towards the ICC World Cup 2023.


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Four years have passed since Pakistan under the leadership of Sarfaraz Ahmed crashed out of the 2019 World Cup. At the time, the cry for ‘change’ had been amplifying in the build up, throughout the tournament and directly after it once the fate of Pakistan had been sealed with the net run rate not being good enough to overcome the joint 4th position spot holders.

With the progression of time, Pakistan entered a new phase, a refreshed cycle under a new style of leadership and a renewed sense of player empowerment. The theme of this renaissance was based around the notion that the ‘captain of the side must be someone who can lead from the front with performances’. With political change in leadership came a shift in the direction of where the nation was heading, and cricket was just one part of it.

A new domestic structure saw teams significantly being reduced to six (national regions) with the hope that the compressing of the player roster will enhance the standard and quality of cricket. Perhaps the greatest and most important change that has happened in the last four years is the full resumption and return of international cricket in Pakistan. The shift in leadership, playing style and direction was to be executed in front of the people of Pakistan and not just on away tours or make shift home venues.

Besides the transition of leadership and direction of playing, the once beautiful game of cricket itself has gone through a surreal change in the past 4 years. With the rise of franchise league cricket, the IPL window expansion and the Big 3 (India, Australia and England) openly scheduling more cricket amongst themselves to ensure best financial benefit; such circumstances have somewhat hampered the standard of international cricket played amongst the non-financially marketable sides, especially in the white ball format. ODI cricket in general has taken a back seat for most part in the 4-year cycle in a world where T20 cricket has continued to grow in importance, whilst the 50 over game is now starting to be viewed as a drag out of what could be settled in 20 overs instead.

Amidst all of the political, environmental and cricketing transitions; the Pakistan cricket team have quietly built a side that hopes to compete in the biggest international tournament in world cricket: The ICC One Day World Championship to be held in India 2023. This team has been built upon the following pillars:

1. A retained top 3 from the 2019 world cup team (Fakhar, Imam and Babar, consisting of 3 batsmen who have a collective average of 150 with strike rates ranging from 80-100. The trio have a collective experience of 252 ODI’s, and a total of 38 ODI tons, 62 ODI 50s. These numbers are excellent and have accumulated due to the reward of consistency in ‘persistence’.

2. A seam attack that has grown in stature, and warrants concern within the opposition to an extent. The growth of Shaheen Shah Afridi has been a highlight of the past 4 years in all formats, and the emergence of Harris Rauf through league cricket transitioning into white ball international cricket has also been a source of joy for the Pakistan fans. Moreover, the resurgence of the highly touted Naseem Shah, whose toil in Red Ball cricket and personal hardships became the means for his strength (mentally). This trio of seamers has collectively picked up 162 ODI wickets, with all 3 averaging below 25 runs per wicket and economies ranging from 4.5-5.5 (world class numbers).

With six strong, good cricketers in the side the Pakistan team have embarked on a journey where they have defeated the likes of West Indies, Australia and New Zealand at home in the 50 over format (regardless of the standard of opposition presented before them), and have also trumped a strong Afghanistan side away from home in the build up to their eventual rise to the number 1 ICC ranking in the ODI format.

But lets pause everything at this point! Right in this moment, Pakistan and their fans were ecstatic at being on top of the world. Everything they had worked on since the 2019 world cup exit has at this very point fallen into place for the side to enter a major tournament as strong contenders. The issues supposedly removed, the positives built upon to create a strong unit of 50 over cricketers. This moment, this blissful moment could be compared with James Cameron’s iconic scene portraying Leonardo Dicaprio’s character of Jack ‘on top of the world’ as soon as the HMS Titanic departed for its maiden voyage.

What followed was a harsh reality, a reality that will be the basis of this preview for the Pakistan Men’s International 50 over squad that has been selected for the upcoming event. This essay/preview will be divided into two perspectives (positives and negatives) based on two separate timeframes:

1. The positives of the squad will be discussed in light of Pakistan’s pre–Asia Cup group of 4 entry, and the imagination will speculate the potential positive outcomes whilst mentally erasing what happened against India and Sri Lanka (Asia Cup 2023).

2. The negative elements of this squad will be discussed in light of Pakistan’s embarrassing exit of the Asia Cup 2023, a space of a few days in which 2 games (out of a sustained period of positivity prior to this) have raised serious questions going into the mega tournament.

With this detailed background and context, let us now see what the positive elements are going into this world cup for the Pakistan Men’s squad.


1. A reliable and consistent number 3 Batsman, who also happens to be the captain of the side.

Whilst the praise for Babar Azam’s excellence and consistency has somewhat been expressed in the initial build up alongside the fantastic top 3 Pakistan possess, it is still worth singling out the importance of the man to this side. Babar will enter his first tournament/series in India having amassed acclaim throughout the globe with excellent performances. The fastest to 5000 ODI runs, and 1 century away from breaking Pakistan’s ODI record for most centuries held by the Legendary Saeed Anwar. The top ranked number 3 will be eager to achieve this feat and hopefully break the record with hundreds on the grandest stage and on the soil of the arch nemesis. Babar’s personal strive to be excellent is a major plus for a side who can use his consistency and confidence to their avail and help contribute with the bat to the side knowing that their captain will stand and bat for them.


2. The world’s scariest new ball bowler; Shaheen Shah Afridi

It is often heard many times in commentary and generally in cricketing circles, that every delivery of Shaheen’s first over and opening spell is an event in itself. The left arm talisman who will look to continue the legacy of the legendary Wasim Akram has matured drastically as a bowler since his first world cup 4 years ago. During his journey, Shaheen has set the world alight with first over wickets of some of the biggest names in world cricket. The Pakistan team and fans will hope that Shaheen stays fit throughout the tournament, and besides this they would hope that he gets that dangerous inswing at good pace which all opening batsmen know is coming, yet they are still clueless on how to play it. Shaheen’s initial burst is highly important in setting the tone for Pakistan as a fielding side, as the pressure built upon the opposition with early breakthroughs will open the door for the other bowlers to settle in and deliver good bowling spells.


3. Imam-ul-Haq in good form

Often underappreciated or underrated for his efforts, Imam’s value to the side cannot be overlooked especially considering he is one of the few batsmen going into this tournament with runs under his belt in Asian conditions of late. Scoring good runs against Afghanistan in testing conditions, also a decent outing against Bangladesh in the Asia cup, the left-handed anchoring opener will look to stand firm for Pakistan and bat through against the quality attacks of the world posed against them. Into the build-up of this world cup, Imam in recent history has shown reasonable improvement in his intent, trying to keep up with a run a ball strike rate. Imam also has demonstrated good ability against swing early on, and the ability to play spin confidently through the middle. What remains to be seen is whether Imam, like other key players can remain fit throughout the tournament considering his sudden back injury on the morning of the Sri Lanka match. Imam’s importance is further enhanced with his supposed ability to keep wickets as well if the need arises…


4. Solid cricketers with good Test match experience as members of the squad. Vital additions in tackling spin.

One day cricket requires the right balance between skills required to excel in T20 cricket, and the patience required to survive in red ball cricket. Game situations in ODI cricket often require a player to channel their experiences from the red ball game, for example when facing a highly difficult new ball spell by an opening bowler with his tail up. Such situations require the openers to call upon experience gained at leaving the ball for instance in red ball cricket to get through the difficult period, in order to cash in later in more favourable conditions or easier bowlers. There are times when a bowling side realises that they have achieved success on a track by bowling an opposition out cheaply, and that they themselves will struggle to attain these runs with the bat on the same surface. On such occasions, a team may call upon their experience in either T20 cricket to run down the runs as soon as possible during the powerplay or use all of their Test match skills in slowly but surely reaching the target without unnecessary risk.

In this regard, Pakistan have done well to induct two good red ball batsmen into the squad (Abdullah Shafique and Saud Shakeel). Both are finding their feet in this format, but both have demonstrated excellent ability at international Test level. With the key being the need of the ability to play spin; Saud, Abdullah and even Salman Agha are welcome additions to a team that have sorely missed the skills of batsmen who played spin with class and ease, namely Inzimam, Younis Khan, Mohammad Yousuf, Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Hafeez. With spin being a key component of this year’s world cup, these players and their skill to tackle the challenge ahead is vital.


5. Comradery/Brotherhood/Unity

Regardless of rumours, there is no doubt that the Pakistan captain is acclaimed for his good work in creating a unit of players that enjoys and loves each other’s company. Babar Azam is often praised for assembling a team of players that have united to play as one, in comparison to the teams representing Pakistan of yesteryears which were plagued with stories of disunity within. Such camaraderie will be the key in order to stay together and standing firm in the face of adversity, especially with some of the toughest fixtures piling up one after the other. A slip up against a good side could lead to a loss, but the ability to bounce back in the next game and overcome the challenge is the hallmark of champions. For this resurgence, the team being united as one throughout will be a key factor.

Positively, the Pakistan chief selector with the consultation of the Pakistan captain has backed a squad of players that was initially selected for the Asia cup. One change was made to this squad due to the injury of Naseem Shah, with Hassan Ali returning due to his extensive experience with Pakistan in the past. Some further additions were made in the form of Abrar Ahmed helping in the spin department as a reserve. Considering the captain, chief selector and chairman have backed a group of players that have been a part of a combination for the past two years by rewarding them with world cup selection, why then is it that there was a huge outcry within the media?

The squad selected is far from perfect, and there are questions that must be answered. Some questions may be posed in the form of negatives or shortcomings for some, whilst others may perceive them in a more positive light.


1. Senior, regular players losing form and confidence on the eve of a mega event+ ineffective spin bowling attack

Pakistan have invested far too much time and trust in the abilities of Fakhar Zaman as an opener, and Shadab Khan as their main spinner for these two players to suddenly look hopelessly out of form against good opposition. The management and captain have on numerous times acknowledged Pakistan’s lack of taking wickets in the middle overs as becoming a detriment, and this has a lot to do with the main spinner or spinners of the side not being able to bowl with the consistency and patience required to build the right kind of pressure which results into wickets.

Besides Shadab’s form, his basic ability to bowl proper 50 over lines and lengths with consistency is under question, with pundits now publicly calling out his disinterest in red ball fc cricket. Besides the confusion of whether to drop the vice-captain of Pakistan, captain Babar Azam clearly has a confusion on whether he trusts Usama Mir as his actual spinner, with Shadab as his bowling all-rounder? Usama has impressed for most part since his inclusion could not make a mark against Afghanistan and has since been out of contention. Considering Shadab’s clear display of not being able to carry the burden of middle overs bowling as the main spinner, Babar will have to make the tough decision of whether to either,

a) Drop Shadab from the playing XI and trust Usama as the lead spinner

b) Keep Shadab and Usama both, whilst dropping a seamer

c) Keep Shadab solely and hope for the best from him

On the matter of Fakhar Zaman, there are plenty of risk-free batters in the wings ready to walk into the team, score a 65 ball 50 and displace him from the team for good. Its up to Fakhar now, whether he wants to bat for the team and play freely the way he so brilliantly can, or bar for himself and score a 70 ball fifty to give himself a bit of a rope.


2. The curious case of Iftikhar Ahmed: What exactly is his role in the side?

Iftikhar also has been riding his goodwill with the fans after good performances against Nepal and a decent performance against Sri Lanka. However, it is hard to understand what his true role is in this side especially seeing how on two occasions in the last 6-7 games he has been sent to bat after Usama Mir, Mohammad Harris, Mohammad Nawaz to name some players. For a person who has a FC average of 40 runs and a List A average of 49 to not have a proper batting number in the top 4 or 5 is beyond belief and reeks of total mismanagement or confusion. Pakistan MUST decide a batting number for Iftikhar and nail him down into that number regardless of the situation or bowlers that are bowling. They wouldn’t do these shifts for a batsman of Rizwan’s calibre, then why must they do it for Iftikhar? Give him a number, keep him there, don’t get too funky with him!


3. Babar Azam’s failure to develop a proper fast bowling all-rounder coming back to haunt him

There really is no point writing essays upon essays about where Babar goes wrong as a captain on the field. One eventually gives up and lets the person do things in his own way, which isn’t exactly the worst considering Pakistan has played a Semi-final and final in the T20 world cups under him. However, one very valid criticism Babar cannot and should not avoid is the inability to develop a proper fast bowling all-rounder for his side the way others have given preference to this role.

Time was wasted on Wasim Jr who clearly was a decent pace bowler with batting abilities to hit one shot. Now Wasim is out of favour and cannot find a way into the first XI.

Faheem Ashraf not repaying the faith the management had with him. Showed next to no ability with the bat whilst losing his pace with the bal.

Aamer Jamal was given to Babar Azam as a potential 145 kmh+ bowler with hard hitting abilities against pace, yet Jamal never batted once above number 9 for Pakistan. The serious lack of vision by Babar Azam especially in regard to this one player at least is highly evident, and now Pakistan are at a point where they truly cannot pick a proper all-rounder who can hold his own as a pace bowler and bat in the top order as a batsman. The lack of the pace all-rounder means that Pakistan have no choice but to waste the 3rd seamer’s spot on a specialist bowler with limited batting ability, whilst they could have picked the second spinner if they had a solid pace bowling all-rounder like Cam Green, Hardik Pandya and Ben Stokes.


4. Naseem Shah’s absence. Huge void in the 3rd seamer role.

This is an unfortunate situation that the Pakistan cricket team have found themselves in. It could and could not have been avoided, as there are many well managed international cricket boards who at times cannot avoid injury to its fast bowlers. However, the management should learn from this drawback a major lesson going forward, and that is to keep rotating your seamers as much as possible for white ball series to the point where you are not desperate to find anyone that is fit and available to play for your country (Hassan Ali). One can only hope that Hassan Ali rectifies his wrongs of the past and produces performances befitting international standards having been out of this level of cricket for quite some time.

Hassan’s recent performances, ability, merit, support of the team well documented for everyone to see, hence there is no need to go into the details of his selection. What would have been nice was that the management should have put their personal issues aside for the sake of national interest and recruited the best possible bowler for the job. Hassan has been picked, best of luck to him and Pakistan.

5. Lack of killer instinct/game awareness/intent

A lot of talk about becoming a dominating and aggressive side. Teams announced 24 hours prior to the match as a sign of confidence, but the application on the pitch is underwhelming as of now. 193 runs were chased in ‘our own time’ by the batsmen against Bangladesh. If Sri Lanka didn’t beat us in the game, NRR most certainly would have knocked Pakistan out of the tournament. Like it did in 2019 and could have done on many other occasions. Pakistan have the choice of wether they want to continue with this approach of neglecting NRR and just doing whatever it takes and however long it takes to win a game, only for it to come back and bite you in the backside…or actually stay alert and vigilant for once and get things done like a champion team would. In particular:

If you bowl out an opposition cheaply, try getting the runs as soon as possible.

If you are batting first against a lesser side (according to your understanding), look to bat them out of the game and then skittle them out cheaply with the ball.

If you end up facing a mammoth total against a good bowling attack, do whatever you can to stay at the crease for as long as possible to close out the deficit once it becomes clear that the total will be out of your reach.

For once, NRR and basic game awareness cannot be left for granted. Wasting reviews because of immature, selfish bowlers cannot also be a thing.


Conclusion/Prediction

Is it honestly possible to predict the outcome of Pakistan cricket in any tournament? You can only safely predict that they will not win it, or advance into the next round. There are key factors that go against Pakistan in this year’s tournament:

Hardly any player has played in India before: This would not have been an issue in the past as the conditions of the sub-continent are quite similar for India and Pakistan, and the non-Asian teams would find the conditions alien to them hence struggle against the top-class spinners of the sub-continent, this was evident in 2011 when India last hosted a 50 over world cup.

Experience of Indian conditions is quite common: Things are very different now. All the top players from each nation have a substantial amount of experience playing in Indian conditions, unlike 2011 where the IPL was a few years young and acclimatising to the sub-continent was a lot harder for these teams. Pakistan therefore are on even playing fields against the SENA sides including the strong Asian sides as well.

My honest prediction is quite complicated but consists of the following points:

I do not feel Pakistan are mentally and physically strong enough to defeat India, England, Australia and New Zealand. That’s 4 out of their 9 opponents, although I didn’t feel Pakistan were mentally or physically strong enough to defeat England in 2019 and that clearly wasn’t the case.

I do not feel Pakistan will win all four of their fixtures against Netherlands, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka. One, if not two of these games will go right down to the wire with either side likely to win.

I am not sure what kind of South Africa will turn up to this year’s World Cup, but man to man Pakistan do not have the ability to beat them. If South Africa are switched off, that’s one strong team who I think Pakistan has its number and should defeat.

I’m predicting 5 out of 9 wins, but I cannot specifically identify which 5 Pakistan will win. Can anyone?
 
Good analysis, but I feel New Zealand can be beaten as Pakistan have their number in ICC tournaments.
 
Pakistan may surprise.

Shadab on spinning wickets may get his mojo back.

I predict 6 out of 9.

Dont know which 6 though.
 
Good analysis and great write up! Hopefully we get more than 6 wins.
 
Well written.

Think an underrated point you mentioned is our lack of a killer instinct. We're in no rush to chase down totals which could come back to bite us. Could be a result of players playing for themselves rather than the team.

All in all, I'm quite positive and think we have a team that has the ability to beat any team. Bating has strengthened, albeit a bit slow. But I'll take it. Bowling without Naseem is a huge loss, but we still have Shaheen, Rauf and Hasan Ali. Bit unclear how Hasan Ali will perform but im optimistic as his form has been good.

In fact, Hasan Ali might bring a bit more firepower down the order too.
 
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3. Babar Azam’s failure to develop a proper fast bowling all-rounder coming back to haunt him
A very valid point because in India its a fast bowling all rounders who will create an impact, mumbai, banglore, dehli all support a bit of swing and bounce early on but our team is totally relying on spinners, look at hardik pandya and Ben Stokes they both win matches for their respective teams either with bat or ball, we need someone who can bowl with consistent line and length and can bat too not like rana faheem Ashraf. Certainly Amir Jamal has some spark in it but babar never trusted him.
 
Excellent write up Rana Saab
I too predict 5 wins out of 9
Could easily have been better with good spinners
 
Great analysis, Rana.
I liked the point about Fakhar. Right now, we don't have the ability to put opposition bowlers under pressure from the get-go. It's vital that Fakhar steps up this WC. If he is able to find form I think we can do better than 5/9
 
Many thanks to @Rana for this very detailed analysis of the issues confronting Pakistan as they head towards the ICC World Cup 2023.


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Four years have passed since Pakistan under the leadership of Sarfaraz Ahmed crashed out of the 2019 World Cup. At the time, the cry for ‘change’ had been amplifying in the build up, throughout the tournament and directly after it once the fate of Pakistan had been sealed with the net run rate not being good enough to overcome the joint 4th position spot holders.

With the progression of time, Pakistan entered a new phase, a refreshed cycle under a new style of leadership and a renewed sense of player empowerment. The theme of this renaissance was based around the notion that the ‘captain of the side must be someone who can lead from the front with performances’. With political change in leadership came a shift in the direction of where the nation was heading, and cricket was just one part of it.

A new domestic structure saw teams significantly being reduced to six (national regions) with the hope that the compressing of the player roster will enhance the standard and quality of cricket. Perhaps the greatest and most important change that has happened in the last four years is the full resumption and return of international cricket in Pakistan. The shift in leadership, playing style and direction was to be executed in front of the people of Pakistan and not just on away tours or make shift home venues.

Besides the transition of leadership and direction of playing, the once beautiful game of cricket itself has gone through a surreal change in the past 4 years. With the rise of franchise league cricket, the IPL window expansion and the Big 3 (India, Australia and England) openly scheduling more cricket amongst themselves to ensure best financial benefit; such circumstances have somewhat hampered the standard of international cricket played amongst the non-financially marketable sides, especially in the white ball format. ODI cricket in general has taken a back seat for most part in the 4-year cycle in a world where T20 cricket has continued to grow in importance, whilst the 50 over game is now starting to be viewed as a drag out of what could be settled in 20 overs instead.

Amidst all of the political, environmental and cricketing transitions; the Pakistan cricket team have quietly built a side that hopes to compete in the biggest international tournament in world cricket: The ICC One Day World Championship to be held in India 2023. This team has been built upon the following pillars:

1. A retained top 3 from the 2019 world cup team (Fakhar, Imam and Babar, consisting of 3 batsmen who have a collective average of 150 with strike rates ranging from 80-100. The trio have a collective experience of 252 ODI’s, and a total of 38 ODI tons, 62 ODI 50s. These numbers are excellent and have accumulated due to the reward of consistency in ‘persistence’.

2. A seam attack that has grown in stature, and warrants concern within the opposition to an extent. The growth of Shaheen Shah Afridi has been a highlight of the past 4 years in all formats, and the emergence of Harris Rauf through league cricket transitioning into white ball international cricket has also been a source of joy for the Pakistan fans. Moreover, the resurgence of the highly touted Naseem Shah, whose toil in Red Ball cricket and personal hardships became the means for his strength (mentally). This trio of seamers has collectively picked up 162 ODI wickets, with all 3 averaging below 25 runs per wicket and economies ranging from 4.5-5.5 (world class numbers).

With six strong, good cricketers in the side the Pakistan team have embarked on a journey where they have defeated the likes of West Indies, Australia and New Zealand at home in the 50 over format (regardless of the standard of opposition presented before them), and have also trumped a strong Afghanistan side away from home in the build up to their eventual rise to the number 1 ICC ranking in the ODI format.

But lets pause everything at this point! Right in this moment, Pakistan and their fans were ecstatic at being on top of the world. Everything they had worked on since the 2019 world cup exit has at this very point fallen into place for the side to enter a major tournament as strong contenders. The issues supposedly removed, the positives built upon to create a strong unit of 50 over cricketers. This moment, this blissful moment could be compared with James Cameron’s iconic scene portraying Leonardo Dicaprio’s character of Jack ‘on top of the world’ as soon as the HMS Titanic departed for its maiden voyage.

What followed was a harsh reality, a reality that will be the basis of this preview for the Pakistan Men’s International 50 over squad that has been selected for the upcoming event. This essay/preview will be divided into two perspectives (positives and negatives) based on two separate timeframes:

1. The positives of the squad will be discussed in light of Pakistan’s pre–Asia Cup group of 4 entry, and the imagination will speculate the potential positive outcomes whilst mentally erasing what happened against India and Sri Lanka (Asia Cup 2023).

2. The negative elements of this squad will be discussed in light of Pakistan’s embarrassing exit of the Asia Cup 2023, a space of a few days in which 2 games (out of a sustained period of positivity prior to this) have raised serious questions going into the mega tournament.

With this detailed background and context, let us now see what the positive elements are going into this world cup for the Pakistan Men’s squad.


1. A reliable and consistent number 3 Batsman, who also happens to be the captain of the side.

Whilst the praise for Babar Azam’s excellence and consistency has somewhat been expressed in the initial build up alongside the fantastic top 3 Pakistan possess, it is still worth singling out the importance of the man to this side. Babar will enter his first tournament/series in India having amassed acclaim throughout the globe with excellent performances. The fastest to 5000 ODI runs, and 1 century away from breaking Pakistan’s ODI record for most centuries held by the Legendary Saeed Anwar. The top ranked number 3 will be eager to achieve this feat and hopefully break the record with hundreds on the grandest stage and on the soil of the arch nemesis. Babar’s personal strive to be excellent is a major plus for a side who can use his consistency and confidence to their avail and help contribute with the bat to the side knowing that their captain will stand and bat for them.


2. The world’s scariest new ball bowler; Shaheen Shah Afridi

It is often heard many times in commentary and generally in cricketing circles, that every delivery of Shaheen’s first over and opening spell is an event in itself. The left arm talisman who will look to continue the legacy of the legendary Wasim Akram has matured drastically as a bowler since his first world cup 4 years ago. During his journey, Shaheen has set the world alight with first over wickets of some of the biggest names in world cricket. The Pakistan team and fans will hope that Shaheen stays fit throughout the tournament, and besides this they would hope that he gets that dangerous inswing at good pace which all opening batsmen know is coming, yet they are still clueless on how to play it. Shaheen’s initial burst is highly important in setting the tone for Pakistan as a fielding side, as the pressure built upon the opposition with early breakthroughs will open the door for the other bowlers to settle in and deliver good bowling spells.


3. Imam-ul-Haq in good form

Often underappreciated or underrated for his efforts, Imam’s value to the side cannot be overlooked especially considering he is one of the few batsmen going into this tournament with runs under his belt in Asian conditions of late. Scoring good runs against Afghanistan in testing conditions, also a decent outing against Bangladesh in the Asia cup, the left-handed anchoring opener will look to stand firm for Pakistan and bat through against the quality attacks of the world posed against them. Into the build-up of this world cup, Imam in recent history has shown reasonable improvement in his intent, trying to keep up with a run a ball strike rate. Imam also has demonstrated good ability against swing early on, and the ability to play spin confidently through the middle. What remains to be seen is whether Imam, like other key players can remain fit throughout the tournament considering his sudden back injury on the morning of the Sri Lanka match. Imam’s importance is further enhanced with his supposed ability to keep wickets as well if the need arises…


4. Solid cricketers with good Test match experience as members of the squad. Vital additions in tackling spin.

One day cricket requires the right balance between skills required to excel in T20 cricket, and the patience required to survive in red ball cricket. Game situations in ODI cricket often require a player to channel their experiences from the red ball game, for example when facing a highly difficult new ball spell by an opening bowler with his tail up. Such situations require the openers to call upon experience gained at leaving the ball for instance in red ball cricket to get through the difficult period, in order to cash in later in more favourable conditions or easier bowlers. There are times when a bowling side realises that they have achieved success on a track by bowling an opposition out cheaply, and that they themselves will struggle to attain these runs with the bat on the same surface. On such occasions, a team may call upon their experience in either T20 cricket to run down the runs as soon as possible during the powerplay or use all of their Test match skills in slowly but surely reaching the target without unnecessary risk.

In this regard, Pakistan have done well to induct two good red ball batsmen into the squad (Abdullah Shafique and Saud Shakeel). Both are finding their feet in this format, but both have demonstrated excellent ability at international Test level. With the key being the need of the ability to play spin; Saud, Abdullah and even Salman Agha are welcome additions to a team that have sorely missed the skills of batsmen who played spin with class and ease, namely Inzimam, Younis Khan, Mohammad Yousuf, Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Hafeez. With spin being a key component of this year’s world cup, these players and their skill to tackle the challenge ahead is vital.


5. Comradery/Brotherhood/Unity

Regardless of rumours, there is no doubt that the Pakistan captain is acclaimed for his good work in creating a unit of players that enjoys and loves each other’s company. Babar Azam is often praised for assembling a team of players that have united to play as one, in comparison to the teams representing Pakistan of yesteryears which were plagued with stories of disunity within. Such camaraderie will be the key in order to stay together and standing firm in the face of adversity, especially with some of the toughest fixtures piling up one after the other. A slip up against a good side could lead to a loss, but the ability to bounce back in the next game and overcome the challenge is the hallmark of champions. For this resurgence, the team being united as one throughout will be a key factor.

Positively, the Pakistan chief selector with the consultation of the Pakistan captain has backed a squad of players that was initially selected for the Asia cup. One change was made to this squad due to the injury of Naseem Shah, with Hassan Ali returning due to his extensive experience with Pakistan in the past. Some further additions were made in the form of Abrar Ahmed helping in the spin department as a reserve. Considering the captain, chief selector and chairman have backed a group of players that have been a part of a combination for the past two years by rewarding them with world cup selection, why then is it that there was a huge outcry within the media?

The squad selected is far from perfect, and there are questions that must be answered. Some questions may be posed in the form of negatives or shortcomings for some, whilst others may perceive them in a more positive light.


1. Senior, regular players losing form and confidence on the eve of a mega event+ ineffective spin bowling attack

Pakistan have invested far too much time and trust in the abilities of Fakhar Zaman as an opener, and Shadab Khan as their main spinner for these two players to suddenly look hopelessly out of form against good opposition. The management and captain have on numerous times acknowledged Pakistan’s lack of taking wickets in the middle overs as becoming a detriment, and this has a lot to do with the main spinner or spinners of the side not being able to bowl with the consistency and patience required to build the right kind of pressure which results into wickets.

Besides Shadab’s form, his basic ability to bowl proper 50 over lines and lengths with consistency is under question, with pundits now publicly calling out his disinterest in red ball fc cricket. Besides the confusion of whether to drop the vice-captain of Pakistan, captain Babar Azam clearly has a confusion on whether he trusts Usama Mir as his actual spinner, with Shadab as his bowling all-rounder? Usama has impressed for most part since his inclusion could not make a mark against Afghanistan and has since been out of contention. Considering Shadab’s clear display of not being able to carry the burden of middle overs bowling as the main spinner, Babar will have to make the tough decision of whether to either,

a) Drop Shadab from the playing XI and trust Usama as the lead spinner

b) Keep Shadab and Usama both, whilst dropping a seamer

c) Keep Shadab solely and hope for the best from him

On the matter of Fakhar Zaman, there are plenty of risk-free batters in the wings ready to walk into the team, score a 65 ball 50 and displace him from the team for good. Its up to Fakhar now, whether he wants to bat for the team and play freely the way he so brilliantly can, or bar for himself and score a 70 ball fifty to give himself a bit of a rope.


2. The curious case of Iftikhar Ahmed: What exactly is his role in the side?

Iftikhar also has been riding his goodwill with the fans after good performances against Nepal and a decent performance against Sri Lanka. However, it is hard to understand what his true role is in this side especially seeing how on two occasions in the last 6-7 games he has been sent to bat after Usama Mir, Mohammad Harris, Mohammad Nawaz to name some players. For a person who has a FC average of 40 runs and a List A average of 49 to not have a proper batting number in the top 4 or 5 is beyond belief and reeks of total mismanagement or confusion. Pakistan MUST decide a batting number for Iftikhar and nail him down into that number regardless of the situation or bowlers that are bowling. They wouldn’t do these shifts for a batsman of Rizwan’s calibre, then why must they do it for Iftikhar? Give him a number, keep him there, don’t get too funky with him!


3. Babar Azam’s failure to develop a proper fast bowling all-rounder coming back to haunt him

There really is no point writing essays upon essays about where Babar goes wrong as a captain on the field. One eventually gives up and lets the person do things in his own way, which isn’t exactly the worst considering Pakistan has played a Semi-final and final in the T20 world cups under him. However, one very valid criticism Babar cannot and should not avoid is the inability to develop a proper fast bowling all-rounder for his side the way others have given preference to this role.

Time was wasted on Wasim Jr who clearly was a decent pace bowler with batting abilities to hit one shot. Now Wasim is out of favour and cannot find a way into the first XI.

Faheem Ashraf not repaying the faith the management had with him. Showed next to no ability with the bat whilst losing his pace with the bal.

Aamer Jamal was given to Babar Azam as a potential 145 kmh+ bowler with hard hitting abilities against pace, yet Jamal never batted once above number 9 for Pakistan. The serious lack of vision by Babar Azam especially in regard to this one player at least is highly evident, and now Pakistan are at a point where they truly cannot pick a proper all-rounder who can hold his own as a pace bowler and bat in the top order as a batsman. The lack of the pace all-rounder means that Pakistan have no choice but to waste the 3rd seamer’s spot on a specialist bowler with limited batting ability, whilst they could have picked the second spinner if they had a solid pace bowling all-rounder like Cam Green, Hardik Pandya and Ben Stokes.


4. Naseem Shah’s absence. Huge void in the 3rd seamer role.

This is an unfortunate situation that the Pakistan cricket team have found themselves in. It could and could not have been avoided, as there are many well managed international cricket boards who at times cannot avoid injury to its fast bowlers. However, the management should learn from this drawback a major lesson going forward, and that is to keep rotating your seamers as much as possible for white ball series to the point where you are not desperate to find anyone that is fit and available to play for your country (Hassan Ali). One can only hope that Hassan Ali rectifies his wrongs of the past and produces performances befitting international standards having been out of this level of cricket for quite some time.

Hassan’s recent performances, ability, merit, support of the team well documented for everyone to see, hence there is no need to go into the details of his selection. What would have been nice was that the management should have put their personal issues aside for the sake of national interest and recruited the best possible bowler for the job. Hassan has been picked, best of luck to him and Pakistan.

5. Lack of killer instinct/game awareness/intent

A lot of talk about becoming a dominating and aggressive side. Teams announced 24 hours prior to the match as a sign of confidence, but the application on the pitch is underwhelming as of now. 193 runs were chased in ‘our own time’ by the batsmen against Bangladesh. If Sri Lanka didn’t beat us in the game, NRR most certainly would have knocked Pakistan out of the tournament. Like it did in 2019 and could have done on many other occasions. Pakistan have the choice of wether they want to continue with this approach of neglecting NRR and just doing whatever it takes and however long it takes to win a game, only for it to come back and bite you in the backside…or actually stay alert and vigilant for once and get things done like a champion team would. In particular:

If you bowl out an opposition cheaply, try getting the runs as soon as possible.

If you are batting first against a lesser side (according to your understanding), look to bat them out of the game and then skittle them out cheaply with the ball.

If you end up facing a mammoth total against a good bowling attack, do whatever you can to stay at the crease for as long as possible to close out the deficit once it becomes clear that the total will be out of your reach.

For once, NRR and basic game awareness cannot be left for granted. Wasting reviews because of immature, selfish bowlers cannot also be a thing.


Conclusion/Prediction

Is it honestly possible to predict the outcome of Pakistan cricket in any tournament? You can only safely predict that they will not win it, or advance into the next round. There are key factors that go against Pakistan in this year’s tournament:

Hardly any player has played in India before: This would not have been an issue in the past as the conditions of the sub-continent are quite similar for India and Pakistan, and the non-Asian teams would find the conditions alien to them hence struggle against the top-class spinners of the sub-continent, this was evident in 2011 when India last hosted a 50 over world cup.

Experience of Indian conditions is quite common: Things are very different now. All the top players from each nation have a substantial amount of experience playing in Indian conditions, unlike 2011 where the IPL was a few years young and acclimatising to the sub-continent was a lot harder for these teams. Pakistan therefore are on even playing fields against the SENA sides including the strong Asian sides as well.

My honest prediction is quite complicated but consists of the following points:

I do not feel Pakistan are mentally and physically strong enough to defeat India, England, Australia and New Zealand. That’s 4 out of their 9 opponents, although I didn’t feel Pakistan were mentally or physically strong enough to defeat England in 2019 and that clearly wasn’t the case.

I do not feel Pakistan will win all four of their fixtures against Netherlands, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka. One, if not two of these games will go right down to the wire with either side likely to win.

I am not sure what kind of South Africa will turn up to this year’s World Cup, but man to man Pakistan do not have the ability to beat them. If South Africa are switched off, that’s one strong team who I think Pakistan has its number and should defeat.

I’m predicting 5 out of 9 wins, but I cannot specifically identify which 5 Pakistan will win. Can anyone?
Well written
I predict 6 wins out of 9
 
Pakistan may surprise.

Shadab on spinning wickets may get his mojo back.

I predict 6 out of 9.

Dont know which 6 though.
Spin King Shadab will get a clutch of wickets against Ban, ND, Afg & SA. He will then be destroyed by the other teams.

I can see him in matches Vs India, NZ, AU's, Eng & SL scoring 10 - 20 runs, saving 10 runs with his fielding and then getting smacked for 8 runs an over minimum.

Of course there will be the customary dropped catch at crucial moments in the match Vs India
 
Many thanks to @Rana for this very detailed analysis of the issues confronting Pakistan as they head towards the ICC World Cup 2023.


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Four years have passed since Pakistan under the leadership of Sarfaraz Ahmed crashed out of the 2019 World Cup. At the time, the cry for ‘change’ had been amplifying in the build up, throughout the tournament and directly after it once the fate of Pakistan had been sealed with the net run rate not being good enough to overcome the joint 4th position spot holders.

With the progression of time, Pakistan entered a new phase, a refreshed cycle under a new style of leadership and a renewed sense of player empowerment. The theme of this renaissance was based around the notion that the ‘captain of the side must be someone who can lead from the front with performances’. With political change in leadership came a shift in the direction of where the nation was heading, and cricket was just one part of it.

A new domestic structure saw teams significantly being reduced to six (national regions) with the hope that the compressing of the player roster will enhance the standard and quality of cricket. Perhaps the greatest and most important change that has happened in the last four years is the full resumption and return of international cricket in Pakistan. The shift in leadership, playing style and direction was to be executed in front of the people of Pakistan and not just on away tours or make shift home venues.

Besides the transition of leadership and direction of playing, the once beautiful game of cricket itself has gone through a surreal change in the past 4 years. With the rise of franchise league cricket, the IPL window expansion and the Big 3 (India, Australia and England) openly scheduling more cricket amongst themselves to ensure best financial benefit; such circumstances have somewhat hampered the standard of international cricket played amongst the non-financially marketable sides, especially in the white ball format. ODI cricket in general has taken a back seat for most part in the 4-year cycle in a world where T20 cricket has continued to grow in importance, whilst the 50 over game is now starting to be viewed as a drag out of what could be settled in 20 overs instead.

Amidst all of the political, environmental and cricketing transitions; the Pakistan cricket team have quietly built a side that hopes to compete in the biggest international tournament in world cricket: The ICC One Day World Championship to be held in India 2023. This team has been built upon the following pillars:

1. A retained top 3 from the 2019 world cup team (Fakhar, Imam and Babar, consisting of 3 batsmen who have a collective average of 150 with strike rates ranging from 80-100. The trio have a collective experience of 252 ODI’s, and a total of 38 ODI tons, 62 ODI 50s. These numbers are excellent and have accumulated due to the reward of consistency in ‘persistence’.

2. A seam attack that has grown in stature, and warrants concern within the opposition to an extent. The growth of Shaheen Shah Afridi has been a highlight of the past 4 years in all formats, and the emergence of Harris Rauf through league cricket transitioning into white ball international cricket has also been a source of joy for the Pakistan fans. Moreover, the resurgence of the highly touted Naseem Shah, whose toil in Red Ball cricket and personal hardships became the means for his strength (mentally). This trio of seamers has collectively picked up 162 ODI wickets, with all 3 averaging below 25 runs per wicket and economies ranging from 4.5-5.5 (world class numbers).

With six strong, good cricketers in the side the Pakistan team have embarked on a journey where they have defeated the likes of West Indies, Australia and New Zealand at home in the 50 over format (regardless of the standard of opposition presented before them), and have also trumped a strong Afghanistan side away from home in the build up to their eventual rise to the number 1 ICC ranking in the ODI format.

But lets pause everything at this point! Right in this moment, Pakistan and their fans were ecstatic at being on top of the world. Everything they had worked on since the 2019 world cup exit has at this very point fallen into place for the side to enter a major tournament as strong contenders. The issues supposedly removed, the positives built upon to create a strong unit of 50 over cricketers. This moment, this blissful moment could be compared with James Cameron’s iconic scene portraying Leonardo Dicaprio’s character of Jack ‘on top of the world’ as soon as the HMS Titanic departed for its maiden voyage.

What followed was a harsh reality, a reality that will be the basis of this preview for the Pakistan Men’s International 50 over squad that has been selected for the upcoming event. This essay/preview will be divided into two perspectives (positives and negatives) based on two separate timeframes:

1. The positives of the squad will be discussed in light of Pakistan’s pre–Asia Cup group of 4 entry, and the imagination will speculate the potential positive outcomes whilst mentally erasing what happened against India and Sri Lanka (Asia Cup 2023).

2. The negative elements of this squad will be discussed in light of Pakistan’s embarrassing exit of the Asia Cup 2023, a space of a few days in which 2 games (out of a sustained period of positivity prior to this) have raised serious questions going into the mega tournament.

With this detailed background and context, let us now see what the positive elements are going into this world cup for the Pakistan Men’s squad.


1. A reliable and consistent number 3 Batsman, who also happens to be the captain of the side.

Whilst the praise for Babar Azam’s excellence and consistency has somewhat been expressed in the initial build up alongside the fantastic top 3 Pakistan possess, it is still worth singling out the importance of the man to this side. Babar will enter his first tournament/series in India having amassed acclaim throughout the globe with excellent performances. The fastest to 5000 ODI runs, and 1 century away from breaking Pakistan’s ODI record for most centuries held by the Legendary Saeed Anwar. The top ranked number 3 will be eager to achieve this feat and hopefully break the record with hundreds on the grandest stage and on the soil of the arch nemesis. Babar’s personal strive to be excellent is a major plus for a side who can use his consistency and confidence to their avail and help contribute with the bat to the side knowing that their captain will stand and bat for them.


2. The world’s scariest new ball bowler; Shaheen Shah Afridi

It is often heard many times in commentary and generally in cricketing circles, that every delivery of Shaheen’s first over and opening spell is an event in itself. The left arm talisman who will look to continue the legacy of the legendary Wasim Akram has matured drastically as a bowler since his first world cup 4 years ago. During his journey, Shaheen has set the world alight with first over wickets of some of the biggest names in world cricket. The Pakistan team and fans will hope that Shaheen stays fit throughout the tournament, and besides this they would hope that he gets that dangerous inswing at good pace which all opening batsmen know is coming, yet they are still clueless on how to play it. Shaheen’s initial burst is highly important in setting the tone for Pakistan as a fielding side, as the pressure built upon the opposition with early breakthroughs will open the door for the other bowlers to settle in and deliver good bowling spells.


3. Imam-ul-Haq in good form

Often underappreciated or underrated for his efforts, Imam’s value to the side cannot be overlooked especially considering he is one of the few batsmen going into this tournament with runs under his belt in Asian conditions of late. Scoring good runs against Afghanistan in testing conditions, also a decent outing against Bangladesh in the Asia cup, the left-handed anchoring opener will look to stand firm for Pakistan and bat through against the quality attacks of the world posed against them. Into the build-up of this world cup, Imam in recent history has shown reasonable improvement in his intent, trying to keep up with a run a ball strike rate. Imam also has demonstrated good ability against swing early on, and the ability to play spin confidently through the middle. What remains to be seen is whether Imam, like other key players can remain fit throughout the tournament considering his sudden back injury on the morning of the Sri Lanka match. Imam’s importance is further enhanced with his supposed ability to keep wickets as well if the need arises…


4. Solid cricketers with good Test match experience as members of the squad. Vital additions in tackling spin.

One day cricket requires the right balance between skills required to excel in T20 cricket, and the patience required to survive in red ball cricket. Game situations in ODI cricket often require a player to channel their experiences from the red ball game, for example when facing a highly difficult new ball spell by an opening bowler with his tail up. Such situations require the openers to call upon experience gained at leaving the ball for instance in red ball cricket to get through the difficult period, in order to cash in later in more favourable conditions or easier bowlers. There are times when a bowling side realises that they have achieved success on a track by bowling an opposition out cheaply, and that they themselves will struggle to attain these runs with the bat on the same surface. On such occasions, a team may call upon their experience in either T20 cricket to run down the runs as soon as possible during the powerplay or use all of their Test match skills in slowly but surely reaching the target without unnecessary risk.

In this regard, Pakistan have done well to induct two good red ball batsmen into the squad (Abdullah Shafique and Saud Shakeel). Both are finding their feet in this format, but both have demonstrated excellent ability at international Test level. With the key being the need of the ability to play spin; Saud, Abdullah and even Salman Agha are welcome additions to a team that have sorely missed the skills of batsmen who played spin with class and ease, namely Inzimam, Younis Khan, Mohammad Yousuf, Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Hafeez. With spin being a key component of this year’s world cup, these players and their skill to tackle the challenge ahead is vital.


5. Comradery/Brotherhood/Unity

Regardless of rumours, there is no doubt that the Pakistan captain is acclaimed for his good work in creating a unit of players that enjoys and loves each other’s company. Babar Azam is often praised for assembling a team of players that have united to play as one, in comparison to the teams representing Pakistan of yesteryears which were plagued with stories of disunity within. Such camaraderie will be the key in order to stay together and standing firm in the face of adversity, especially with some of the toughest fixtures piling up one after the other. A slip up against a good side could lead to a loss, but the ability to bounce back in the next game and overcome the challenge is the hallmark of champions. For this resurgence, the team being united as one throughout will be a key factor.

Positively, the Pakistan chief selector with the consultation of the Pakistan captain has backed a squad of players that was initially selected for the Asia cup. One change was made to this squad due to the injury of Naseem Shah, with Hassan Ali returning due to his extensive experience with Pakistan in the past. Some further additions were made in the form of Abrar Ahmed helping in the spin department as a reserve. Considering the captain, chief selector and chairman have backed a group of players that have been a part of a combination for the past two years by rewarding them with world cup selection, why then is it that there was a huge outcry within the media?

The squad selected is far from perfect, and there are questions that must be answered. Some questions may be posed in the form of negatives or shortcomings for some, whilst others may perceive them in a more positive light.


1. Senior, regular players losing form and confidence on the eve of a mega event+ ineffective spin bowling attack

Pakistan have invested far too much time and trust in the abilities of Fakhar Zaman as an opener, and Shadab Khan as their main spinner for these two players to suddenly look hopelessly out of form against good opposition. The management and captain have on numerous times acknowledged Pakistan’s lack of taking wickets in the middle overs as becoming a detriment, and this has a lot to do with the main spinner or spinners of the side not being able to bowl with the consistency and patience required to build the right kind of pressure which results into wickets.

Besides Shadab’s form, his basic ability to bowl proper 50 over lines and lengths with consistency is under question, with pundits now publicly calling out his disinterest in red ball fc cricket. Besides the confusion of whether to drop the vice-captain of Pakistan, captain Babar Azam clearly has a confusion on whether he trusts Usama Mir as his actual spinner, with Shadab as his bowling all-rounder? Usama has impressed for most part since his inclusion could not make a mark against Afghanistan and has since been out of contention. Considering Shadab’s clear display of not being able to carry the burden of middle overs bowling as the main spinner, Babar will have to make the tough decision of whether to either,

a) Drop Shadab from the playing XI and trust Usama as the lead spinner

b) Keep Shadab and Usama both, whilst dropping a seamer

c) Keep Shadab solely and hope for the best from him

On the matter of Fakhar Zaman, there are plenty of risk-free batters in the wings ready to walk into the team, score a 65 ball 50 and displace him from the team for good. Its up to Fakhar now, whether he wants to bat for the team and play freely the way he so brilliantly can, or bar for himself and score a 70 ball fifty to give himself a bit of a rope.


2. The curious case of Iftikhar Ahmed: What exactly is his role in the side?

Iftikhar also has been riding his goodwill with the fans after good performances against Nepal and a decent performance against Sri Lanka. However, it is hard to understand what his true role is in this side especially seeing how on two occasions in the last 6-7 games he has been sent to bat after Usama Mir, Mohammad Harris, Mohammad Nawaz to name some players. For a person who has a FC average of 40 runs and a List A average of 49 to not have a proper batting number in the top 4 or 5 is beyond belief and reeks of total mismanagement or confusion. Pakistan MUST decide a batting number for Iftikhar and nail him down into that number regardless of the situation or bowlers that are bowling. They wouldn’t do these shifts for a batsman of Rizwan’s calibre, then why must they do it for Iftikhar? Give him a number, keep him there, don’t get too funky with him!


3. Babar Azam’s failure to develop a proper fast bowling all-rounder coming back to haunt him

There really is no point writing essays upon essays about where Babar goes wrong as a captain on the field. One eventually gives up and lets the person do things in his own way, which isn’t exactly the worst considering Pakistan has played a Semi-final and final in the T20 world cups under him. However, one very valid criticism Babar cannot and should not avoid is the inability to develop a proper fast bowling all-rounder for his side the way others have given preference to this role.

Time was wasted on Wasim Jr who clearly was a decent pace bowler with batting abilities to hit one shot. Now Wasim is out of favour and cannot find a way into the first XI.

Faheem Ashraf not repaying the faith the management had with him. Showed next to no ability with the bat whilst losing his pace with the bal.

Aamer Jamal was given to Babar Azam as a potential 145 kmh+ bowler with hard hitting abilities against pace, yet Jamal never batted once above number 9 for Pakistan. The serious lack of vision by Babar Azam especially in regard to this one player at least is highly evident, and now Pakistan are at a point where they truly cannot pick a proper all-rounder who can hold his own as a pace bowler and bat in the top order as a batsman. The lack of the pace all-rounder means that Pakistan have no choice but to waste the 3rd seamer’s spot on a specialist bowler with limited batting ability, whilst they could have picked the second spinner if they had a solid pace bowling all-rounder like Cam Green, Hardik Pandya and Ben Stokes.


4. Naseem Shah’s absence. Huge void in the 3rd seamer role.

This is an unfortunate situation that the Pakistan cricket team have found themselves in. It could and could not have been avoided, as there are many well managed international cricket boards who at times cannot avoid injury to its fast bowlers. However, the management should learn from this drawback a major lesson going forward, and that is to keep rotating your seamers as much as possible for white ball series to the point where you are not desperate to find anyone that is fit and available to play for your country (Hassan Ali). One can only hope that Hassan Ali rectifies his wrongs of the past and produces performances befitting international standards having been out of this level of cricket for quite some time.

Hassan’s recent performances, ability, merit, support of the team well documented for everyone to see, hence there is no need to go into the details of his selection. What would have been nice was that the management should have put their personal issues aside for the sake of national interest and recruited the best possible bowler for the job. Hassan has been picked, best of luck to him and Pakistan.

5. Lack of killer instinct/game awareness/intent

A lot of talk about becoming a dominating and aggressive side. Teams announced 24 hours prior to the match as a sign of confidence, but the application on the pitch is underwhelming as of now. 193 runs were chased in ‘our own time’ by the batsmen against Bangladesh. If Sri Lanka didn’t beat us in the game, NRR most certainly would have knocked Pakistan out of the tournament. Like it did in 2019 and could have done on many other occasions. Pakistan have the choice of wether they want to continue with this approach of neglecting NRR and just doing whatever it takes and however long it takes to win a game, only for it to come back and bite you in the backside…or actually stay alert and vigilant for once and get things done like a champion team would. In particular:

If you bowl out an opposition cheaply, try getting the runs as soon as possible.

If you are batting first against a lesser side (according to your understanding), look to bat them out of the game and then skittle them out cheaply with the ball.

If you end up facing a mammoth total against a good bowling attack, do whatever you can to stay at the crease for as long as possible to close out the deficit once it becomes clear that the total will be out of your reach.

For once, NRR and basic game awareness cannot be left for granted. Wasting reviews because of immature, selfish bowlers cannot also be a thing.


Conclusion/Prediction

Is it honestly possible to predict the outcome of Pakistan cricket in any tournament? You can only safely predict that they will not win it, or advance into the next round. There are key factors that go against Pakistan in this year’s tournament:

Hardly any player has played in India before: This would not have been an issue in the past as the conditions of the sub-continent are quite similar for India and Pakistan, and the non-Asian teams would find the conditions alien to them hence struggle against the top-class spinners of the sub-continent, this was evident in 2011 when India last hosted a 50 over world cup.

Experience of Indian conditions is quite common: Things are very different now. All the top players from each nation have a substantial amount of experience playing in Indian conditions, unlike 2011 where the IPL was a few years young and acclimatising to the sub-continent was a lot harder for these teams. Pakistan therefore are on even playing fields against the SENA sides including the strong Asian sides as well.

My honest prediction is quite complicated but consists of the following points:

I do not feel Pakistan are mentally and physically strong enough to defeat India, England, Australia and New Zealand. That’s 4 out of their 9 opponents, although I didn’t feel Pakistan were mentally or physically strong enough to defeat England in 2019 and that clearly wasn’t the case.

I do not feel Pakistan will win all four of their fixtures against Netherlands, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka. One, if not two of these games will go right down to the wire with either side likely to win.

I am not sure what kind of South Africa will turn up to this year’s World Cup, but man to man Pakistan do not have the ability to beat them. If South Africa are switched off, that’s one strong team who I think Pakistan has its number and should defeat.

I’m predicting 5 out of 9 wins, but I cannot specifically identify which 5 Pakistan will win. Can anyone?
Excellent write up rana and MIG.

I do believe we will beat nz as we have their number and England too. South Africa in Asian conditions aren't anything special. So lose only to aus, maybe india 50 50 here given the intensity the 2 teams play with and perhaps just one of England nz or SA.
 
People are either overly pessimistic or overly optimistic about this side.

It's a good team. You don't become a Top 2 side without playing good cricket for 4 years.

They are all good cricketers and the structures put in place over the last few years have led to better processes and outcomes.

Obviously, Pakistan's player development, selection and strategies are not on par with the likes of England and New Zealand, but it's comparable to the others and better than India's - which is the least data-driven side in the world.


They may not be front runners for the Cup but this is the best prepared Pakistan side I've seen in a World Cup and I've been watching since 1999.


People forget that in

1999

Miandad accused team of fixing and was removed as coach just before the World Cup, Pakistan started off with Abdul Razzaq batting at 3. Wajahatullah Wasti anyone?

2003

More than half the side did not want Waqar as captain and they were all past it and playing for personal milestones.
Saeed Anwar said angels are going to win the World Cup for Pakistan :))) , Wasim Akram was targeting 500 wickets, Akhtar was looking to hit 100 mph.


2007

PCB were unsure of Akhtar and Asif clearing drug tests and Inzi's captaincy was getting exposed as were his selections.

2011

Shehzad, Asad Shafiq, Misbah , YK in a white ball batting lineup :))) and 3 of them in the middle order. Kamran Dropmal as keeper. 2 chuckers keeping the bowling relevant in middle overs


2015

Nasir Jamshed, Misbah, Maqsood, Yasir Shah, past it Lala, Ahmed Shehzad , fat Umar Akmal.

2019

3 wins and 21 losses against top sides going into the World Cup


These were your teams in the past.

This is comfortably the most professional PAK side I've ever seen .

They all play for the team and there's no bickering for captaincy , toxic characters , players hitting coaches and then failing drug tests.

Yeah workload and injury management may be a concern and requires improvement . And there is a talent gap as well which many won't admit to.

But it's 3 orders of magnitude better than the majority of Pakistani sides Ive seen.
 
People are either overly pessimistic or overly optimistic about this side.

It's a good team. You don't become a Top 2 side without playing good cricket for 4 years.

They are all good cricketers and the structures put in place over the last few years have led to better processes and outcomes.

Obviously, Pakistan's player development, selection and strategies are not on par with the likes of England and New Zealand, but it's comparable to the others and better than India's - which is the least data-driven side in the world.


They may not be front runners for the Cup but this is the best prepared Pakistan side I've seen in a World Cup and I've been watching since 1999.


People forget that in

1999

Miandad accused team of fixing and was removed as coach just before the World Cup, Pakistan started off with Abdul Razzaq batting at 3. Wajahatullah Wasti anyone?

2003

More than half the side did not want Waqar as captain and they were all past it and playing for personal milestones.
Saeed Anwar said angels are going to win the World Cup for Pakistan :))) , Wasim Akram was targeting 500 wickets, Akhtar was looking to hit 100 mph.


2007

PCB were unsure of Akhtar and Asif clearing drug tests and Inzi's captaincy was getting exposed as were his selections.

2011

Shehzad, Asad Shafiq, Misbah , YK in a white ball batting lineup :))) and 3 of them in the middle order. Kamran Dropmal as keeper. 2 chuckers keeping the bowling relevant in middle overs


2015

Nasir Jamshed, Misbah, Maqsood, Yasir Shah, past it Lala, Ahmed Shehzad , fat Umar Akmal.

2019

3 wins and 21 losses against top sides going into the World Cup


These were your teams in the past.

This is comfortably the most professional PAK side I've ever seen .

They all play for the team and there's no bickering for captaincy , toxic characters , players hitting coaches and then failing drug tests.

Yeah workload and injury management may be a concern and requires improvement . And there is a talent gap as well which many won't admit to.

But it's 3 orders of magnitude better than the majority of Pakistani sides Ive seen.
Lol love this analysis.
99 side was slightly better because of the self-belief and qualify of talent in that side.
Don’t forget Waqar and Mushi couldn’t get into the side, even Yousuf was on the bench.
But since then, this is the best side going into the WC.
 
Once again, thanks to @Rana for his super detailed analysis

His article and previous ones can be found in our Beyond the Boundary section at:

 
Excellent post. I'm actually supirsied that you made a very very detailed analysis post. Your analytical ability surpasses mine. Good job bro.

Before reading this post I thought it would be an essay on rizwan 😂. But jokes aside, I agree with everything in the post. Excellent and Killer Job ❤️.
 
People are either overly pessimistic or overly optimistic about this side.

It's a good team. You don't become a Top 2 side without playing good cricket for 4 years.

They are all good cricketers and the structures put in place over the last few years have led to better processes and outcomes.

Obviously, Pakistan's player development, selection and strategies are not on par with the likes of England and New Zealand, but it's comparable to the others and better than India's - which is the least data-driven side in the world.


They may not be front runners for the Cup but this is the best prepared Pakistan side I've seen in a World Cup and I've been watching since 1999.


People forget that in

1999

Miandad accused team of fixing and was removed as coach just before the World Cup, Pakistan started off with Abdul Razzaq batting at 3. Wajahatullah Wasti anyone?

2003

More than half the side did not want Waqar as captain and they were all past it and playing for personal milestones.
Saeed Anwar said angels are going to win the World Cup for Pakistan :))) , Wasim Akram was targeting 500 wickets, Akhtar was looking to hit 100 mph.


2007

PCB were unsure of Akhtar and Asif clearing drug tests and Inzi's captaincy was getting exposed as were his selections.

2011

Shehzad, Asad Shafiq, Misbah , YK in a white ball batting lineup :))) and 3 of them in the middle order. Kamran Dropmal as keeper. 2 chuckers keeping the bowling relevant in middle overs


2015

Nasir Jamshed, Misbah, Maqsood, Yasir Shah, past it Lala, Ahmed Shehzad , fat Umar Akmal.

2019

3 wins and 21 losses against top sides going into the World Cup


These were your teams in the past.

This is comfortably the most professional PAK side I've ever seen .

They all play for the team and there's no bickering for captaincy , toxic characters , players hitting coaches and then failing drug tests.

Yeah workload and injury management may be a concern and requires improvement . And there is a talent gap as well which many won't admit to.

But it's 3 orders of magnitude better than the majority of Pakistani sides Ive seen.

Broskie don't be a hypocrite, you forgot to mention that before going into this world cup we are suffering from Injuries along with suffering an embarrassing tournament display 😂😂.

Our 2011 team had a near unplayable bowling team, batting lineup was weak but the bowling team was next to impossible to play, with the exception of the NZ game and the India game where we dropped like 7 to 10 catches, we shpuld have won that tournament honestly. We chocked.

This time if a side beats us it won't be due to chocking. On paper we have no way of beating Sena or India. South Africa I don't know because their thrashing Australia but I have no clue what happens to them during tournaments.
 
Just to clarify you have forgotten south africa and srilanka..with bangladesh full team.back i think only win could be afghanistan if the wicket isnt spinning
I’ve been pretty kind here

I did mention that man to man Pakistan are not as strong as SA
 
Excellent post. I'm actually supirsied that you made a very very detailed analysis post. Your analytical ability surpasses mine. Good job bro.

Before reading this post I thought it would be an essay on rizwan 😂. But jokes aside, I agree with everything in the post. Excellent and Killer Job ❤️.
How many will Pakistan win do you recon?
 
People's are underrating Pakistan team based on Asia cup .They are no 1 team few day ago and can become no 1 again tonight . Pakistan is one of the favourite to lift the World Cup 2023. Naseem injury dent their chances little bit but still they are favourite as Fakhar and Shadab are big tournament players. I'm backing them to make semi atleast
 
How many will Pakistan win do you recon?
Nedtherlands, Bangladesh, Afghanistan is a 100% victory.

Sri lanka, we will probably win this time around. But it'll be tough, I still back pakistan to win 70% of the time.

South africa: on paper we have no chance in hell, but ik from experience south Africa is a hilarious tournament team so honestly I have no clue, but on paper they are stomping us.

India: Again on paper their winning more often then not.

Australia: Based of recent performances its 50/50 Australia isn't as strong as their 2015/2019 counterpart, they have a slight advantage though.

New Zealand: Probably NZ, but it'll be a tough.

England: On paper we have no chance in hell.

Honestly we are relying on one man miracles like fakhar 150+ master class or rauf/Shaheen 5 wicket haul to win games, that's the issue.

With shadab, Nawaz as pur spin unit, Fakhar out of form, non existent middle order and Babar, Imam and rizwan being one track players, were basically shooting ourselves in the foot.
 
Afghanistan is one team that will most likely run Pakistan right down to the wire. They are one of the few lesser teams that do not display psychological nerves against Pakistan, especially their spinners and some of their batsmen.
 
The problem with teams like Sri Lanka and Bangladesh is that, even if on paper or man to man they have a stronger or more balanced side than Pakistan….psychologically they demonstrate inferiority against them. Just like Pakistan would do against India and Australia
Yh as I said, bangaldesh, Afghanistan, Nedtherlands are sure shot victories with Sri lanka likely losing as well.
 
People's are underrating Pakistan team based on Asia cup .They are no 1 team few day ago and can become no 1 again tonight . Pakistan is one of the favourite to lift the World Cup 2023. Naseem injury dent their chances little bit but still they are favourite as Fakhar and Shadab are big tournament players. I'm backing them to make semi atleast
I think it’s not underwriting

I’ve tried to be as honest as possible. Underwriting would be to assume they would only beat Netherlands and struggle massively against everyone else
 
Afghanistan is one team that will most likely run Pakistan right down to the wire. They are one of the few lesser teams that do not display psychological nerves against Pakistan, especially their spinners and some of their batsmen.
They do, they bottle in the last 10 overs due to pressure. They are more mentally ready then Bangladesh though. I've seen Afghanistan lose from winning positions a million times over at this point, usually in the last 10 overs things go south.
 
Afghanistan has batting to take care of. Their bowling is not a worry but their batting is not that capable to handle pressure.
 
Excellent article but pointless predicting anything for Pakistan one day they will dig their own grave on another day they will climb K2, but not mount everest. Unfortunately they remain unpredictable team and this time their bowling is not even that strong to save them. So for me qualifying for semi is the best they can achieve.
 
This is the best Pakistan team going into the World Cup since '99. There's no last minute panic and all new selections are dew to injuries to main players.

Imam, Babar, Rizwan have good, honest form. Likewise for Shaheen and Rauf. The pedigree is there.

The x factors, Fakhar, Iftikhar and Shadab- you need to take them and back them to come good even if their form isn't working consistently.

This team will do well.
 
Very detailed from Rana. I agree with the point regarding NRR. We often neglect these small aspects but in a tight group makes a huge difference. We took 40 overs to chase 190 vs Bangladesh in the Asia Cup.

Overall I won't make any predictions but Naseem's injury has reduced the expectations on us.
 
Pakistan doesn't have to beat India, Australia, England and NZ to win the world cup. Pakistan has to win 2 times out of the 5 times they will be playing any of these nations, to get to the finals. And of course that 2nd victory has to be in the semis.
 
Pakistan doesn't have to beat India, Australia, England and NZ to win the world cup. Pakistan has to win 2 times out of the 5 times they will be playing any of these nations, to get to the finals. And of course that 2nd victory has to be in the semis.
That’s the thing

The league system makes it much harder for Pakistan to just sneak their way through into the top 4, unlike the two group system which allowed 4 out of 6 to go through into the knockouts

The league system was designed to eliminate the luck/fluke factor and Pakistan often needs that
 
If you look at it from Pakistan’s direct competitors (SA, NZ and SL), what wins are they targeting?

SA: Netherlands (revenge), AFG, SL, AUS, PAK, IND, BAN

NZ: NL, AFG, SL, PAK, IND, SA, BAN

SL: BAN, AFG, PAK, SA, NL, NZ

This is where the 3rd and 4th spot battle is
 
That’s the thing

The league system makes it much harder for Pakistan to just sneak their way through into the top 4, unlike the two group system which allowed 4 out of 6 to go through into the knockouts

The league system was designed to eliminate the luck/fluke factor and Pakistan often needs that
Its very rare that things pan out in a cricket World Cup on expected lines. 2003/07 wc was the only time when the favorites 'Australia' was so far ahead of other teams that most predicted them as winners. But even then no one expected india and Lanka to play the finals in 2003 and 07. Mind it, india was humiliated in NZ just before the wc, so they surprised everyone to reach finals. Similarly no one ever thot that Pakistan and India will be out of 2007 wc in first week itself. The same league system got Pakistan the wc when they lost to what 4 or 5 teams in the tournament of 10?
 
If you look at it from Pakistan’s direct competitors (SA, NZ and SL), what wins are they targeting?

SA: Netherlands (revenge), AFG, SL, AUS, PAK, IND, BAN

NZ: NL, AFG, SL, PAK, IND, SA, BAN

SL: BAN, AFG, PAK, SA, NL, NZ

This is where the 3rd and 4th spot battle is

With all due respect, you're making a mistake with this.
Logic and Pakistan Cricket don't go hand in hand.

They can beat India, England and the Aussies and still lose to a minnow (or two)...

Just have to try an enjoy the ride
 
With all due respect, you're making a mistake with this.
Logic and Pakistan Cricket don't go hand in hand.

They can beat India, England and the Aussies and still lose to a minnow (or two)...

Just have to try an enjoy the ride
Pakistan will definitely beat England and Australia.
 
People are either overly pessimistic or overly optimistic about this side.

It's a good team. You don't become a Top 2 side without playing good cricket for 4 years.

They are all good cricketers and the structures put in place over the last few years have led to better processes and outcomes.

Obviously, Pakistan's player development, selection and strategies are not on par with the likes of England and New Zealand, but it's comparable to the others and better than India's - which is the least data-driven side in the world.


They may not be front runners for the Cup but this is the best prepared Pakistan side I've seen in a World Cup and I've been watching since 1999.


People forget that in

1999

Miandad accused team of fixing and was removed as coach just before the World Cup, Pakistan started off with Abdul Razzaq batting at 3. Wajahatullah Wasti anyone?

2003

More than half the side did not want Waqar as captain and they were all past it and playing for personal milestones.
Saeed Anwar said angels are going to win the World Cup for Pakistan :))) , Wasim Akram was targeting 500 wickets, Akhtar was looking to hit 100 mph.


2007

PCB were unsure of Akhtar and Asif clearing drug tests and Inzi's captaincy was getting exposed as were his selections.

2011

Shehzad, Asad Shafiq, Misbah , YK in a white ball batting lineup :))) and 3 of them in the middle order. Kamran Dropmal as keeper. 2 chuckers keeping the bowling relevant in middle overs


2015

Nasir Jamshed, Misbah, Maqsood, Yasir Shah, past it Lala, Ahmed Shehzad , fat Umar Akmal.

2019

3 wins and 21 losses against top sides going into the World Cup


These were your teams in the past.

This is comfortably the most professional PAK side I've ever seen .

They all play for the team and there's no bickering for captaincy , toxic characters , players hitting coaches and then failing drug tests.

Yeah workload and injury management may be a concern and requires improvement . And there is a talent gap as well which many won't admit to.

But it's 3 orders of magnitude better than the majority of Pakistani sides Ive seen.
Exactly my thoughts! Pakistan team of the past two decades was full of issues with so many club level cricketer and passengers in the team.

We lost quite badly against India in Asia cup and that could happen to any team. We were down and out mentally before the SL match which impacted the overall performance but we still managed to take it to the last two balls without our two main bowlers.

The point is, this team has been playing together for couple of years now and importantly as a unit under Babar's captaincy. I might not like his captaincy but the Asia cup could prove to be blessing in disguise and he may not repeat the same mistakes? We can hope so.

I'm backing this team to end up in top 4 with most likely beating Eng and NZ. From thereon, its just a matter of mental strength and your luck.
 
Exactly my thoughts! Pakistan team of the past two decades was full of issues with so many club level cricketer and passengers in the team.

We lost quite badly against India in Asia cup and that could happen to any team. We were down and out mentally before the SL match which impacted the overall performance but we still managed to take it to the last two balls without our two main bowlers.

The point is, this team has been playing together for couple of years now and importantly as a unit under Babar's captaincy. I might not like his captaincy but the Asia cup could prove to be blessing in disguise and he may not repeat the same mistakes? We can hope so.

I'm backing this team to end up in top 4 with most likely beating Eng and NZ. From thereon, its just a matter of mental strength and your luck.
What club level cricketers did the teams of the past 2 decades have and how is the current team not filled with club level cricketers?

That’s a pretty bold statement
 
What club level cricketers did the teams of the past 2 decades have and how is the current team not filled with club level cricketers?

That’s a pretty bold statement
There were plenty

Ahmed Shehzad
Nasir Jamshed
Sohail Khan
Asif Ali
Rahat Ali

And there were more even more passengers in the team. Talent-wise, they might have been superior but they hardly performed at international level. The likes of M. Hafeez, S. Malik, Akmal brothers, who were consistently in our side, hardly ever performed. Some players were way past their retirement date in few of the Worldcups. Wasim, Waqar in 2003. Inzi in 2007. Younus, Misbah, Afridi in 2015.

This team has been playing together for a couple of years now. Apart from Aga Salman (who i think is not technically an international prospect even with his good test record of late), the team is well balanced. They might not be at par with India or Australia but a much better team compared to the teams we had in thr last two worldcups.

You can't get a better team than this at the moment. On top of it, they all are professionals and not politicians like their predecessors.

This team has been breaking barriers for the last two years so I would back them to win 6 out of 9.
 
The problem is we are banking a bit on historic mental breakdowns of teams such as SA and Afghanistan. History will change one day and this may be it.

Our biggest problem is our team has no danger apart from Shaheen’s first over and a potential good spell by Rauf. That’s it.

Our batting presents no danger to anyone. Babar, Imam and Rizwan may rack up some runs but I don’t think those runs will ever change the outcome of a game.

Our 2019 victory vs SA: foundations were set by a fantastic, hard hitting innings by Haris Sohail

2019 victory vs Afghanistan was Imad’s finish.

2021 vs Afghanistan - a very rare performance from Asif Ali.

2022 victory vs SA - M. Haris, Shadab and Chacha. But do these guys have the ability to make it count over 50 overs?

So even against sides who we may even have a psychological advantage, we can’t just turn up and hope they fold. Someone’s got to make a telling impact.

We have no impact players in our batting line up. People can say Fakhar, but Fakhar is now a shadow of the shadow of Fakhar. Ain’t gonna happen.
 
Australia will probably be on a 6 match losing streak at the start of World Cup. I think they are ripe for the taking. I also think we will get 6 out of 9 victories and make the semis.

England and India are favourites and it's hard to see anything other than an England Vs India final.
 
@Rana you still standing by your predictions?
Why would I not stick by them?

Are Pakistan 150-1 in 17 overs during a warm up game where they elected to bat first and not faced the front line bowlers?
 
  • Pakistan is a very strong team for the Indian conditions. Naseem Shah's (my favorite pace bowler) absence is a big loss. But still they have a good shot at winning the World Cup.
  • In terms of team strength, I would say England has the best chance, but they tend to mess up in Indian conditions. However, many of their players have IPL experience, and that could help them this time.
  • India has a good team, but almost all of them are right-handers. They may struggle here and there, but they can go all the way.
  • South Africa - many people are underestimating them. They have a good team and they typically play very good cricket in Indian conditions.
  • Overall, I expect one of India, England, and Pakistan to win WC 2023. South Africa has an outside chance.
 
Pakistan should win their first two matches convincingly in order to have great confidence going into the matches against the likes of India and Australia. If they have tight matches against Netherlands and Sri Lanka then it is very likely that they will struggle against these teams.
 
Pakistan ,they will stumble out of the gates lose to a team they shouldn't lose to, get the usual beatings from Australia and India and then when the pressure is off they will probably beat England but it will count for nought. It will be another group exit
 
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I knew we will miss Naseem but my God I didn't know it will be this bad. Wasim Jr and Hasan Ali are absolute garbage.


I hope Bobby kaptaan is happy not taking Amir, atleast his friends will play. Doesn't matter that team will crash out of group stages.
 
I knew we will miss Naseem but my God I didn't know it will be this bad. Wasim Jr and Hasan Ali are absolute garbage.


I hope Bobby kaptaan is happy not taking Amir, atleast his friends will play. Doesn't matter that team will crash out of group stages.
As long as no fixer is playing in this team, the fans are happy
 
I knew we will miss Naseem but my God I didn't know it will be this bad. Wasim Jr and Hasan Ali are absolute garbage.


I hope Bobby kaptaan is happy not taking Amir, atleast his friends will play. Doesn't matter that team will crash out of group stages.
My belief is that Allah is always watching.

Allah is the best of planners
 
As long as no fixer is playing in this team, the fans are happy
Which fixer? Who’s fixing?

The only one doing dishonesty with this team is Babar Azam with his selections
 
Amir was no answer he could early bowl 3 overs without struggle, but yes selecting Hasan A and Wasim J was poor. Pakistan has been unlucky too with Ihsan and Husnain, but could had atleast opted for Arshad. I also fear Haris will break down early in the world cup. Inzi and Babar are equally to be blamed for poor selections.
 
My belief is that Allah is always watching.

Allah is the best of planners
Yes but God gives to those who work the hardest and actually deserve it.

2019 world cup final, technically I feel NZ were robbed, they had won that, but it would be a tragedy if they had.

England really worked so hard to go from a 2015 minnow to an impossible world beater nearly reminiscent of the classic Australia.

Pakistan hasn't planned the best, nor has it actually let go of their play for themselves and milestone mantra.

Our team is literally fighting against itself with players like saud, Agha etc fighting for their spots, while golden boys enjoy their Reign.

Its not like that in any other nation. Look at NZ today, rhey were literally retiring out at right times and ensuring every batter gets their due practise. Same with England, they took their best 11, no place for someone like Roy. Gotta be the best.

If you look at our team, ask yourself this, is our current batting and bowling unit really the best 15 in all of pak domestic?
 
People need to relax. Pakistan has never gone into a WC with the perfect set of circumstances and planning. Give the team some time and a few matches to get into rhythm.
 
People need to relax. Pakistan has never gone into a WC with the perfect set of circumstances and planning. Give the team some time and a few matches to get into rhythm.

A warm-up game - sounds like we lost the World Cup final.
 
Amir is never coming back, his fans can go cry about it
Why do you hate amir? I can understand salman butt, nasir jamshed, sharjeel Khan etc, because they genuinely fixed, but why amir?

Amir was 17 and was given a choice by butt, either he would fix, or butt would do everything in his power to end his career, such as benching him 24/7, or removing him from the squad and never having him play again.

Amir was new to the team, and had zero credibility. If he confessed that butt was doing this, butt could deny it, like what proof would amir have? Theirs also the fact that asif would have supported butt and they would have made some sort of Conspiracy that amir was lying in order to overthrow the team captain, and they'd use that excuse to remove him.

Amir was a minor and he quite literally had no choice other then to quit cricket altogether. Amir also came from a poor background and framchise cricket wasn't such a big money making thing back then. He had no choice other then going back to poverty and be put of the team forever.

Amir literally even confessed straight up and was the first one to admit he foxed on butt's orders whereas butt and asif kept denying it until their got exposed completly.

Amir may have serious attitude issues and he may have certain problems but he literally came back and won a tournament for his country, and dismantled a rival nation outright humiliating India.

I don't see how you could call him a fixer really.
 
Why do you hate amir? I can understand salman butt, nasir jamshed, sharjeel Khan etc, because they genuinely fixed, but why amir?

Amir was 17 and was given a choice by butt, either he would fix, or butt would do everything in his power to end his career, such as benching him 24/7, or removing him from the squad and never having him play again.

Amir was new to the team, and had zero credibility. If he confessed that butt was doing this, butt could deny it, like what proof would amir have? Theirs also the fact that asif would have supported butt and they would have made some sort of Conspiracy that amir was lying in order to overthrow the team captain, and they'd use that excuse to remove him.

Amir was a minor and he quite literally had no choice other then to quit cricket altogether. Amir also came from a poor background and framchise cricket wasn't such a big money making thing back then. He had no choice other then going back to poverty and be put of the team forever.

Amir literally even confessed straight up and was the first one to admit he foxed on butt's orders whereas butt and asif kept denying it until their got exposed completly.

Amir may have serious attitude issues and he may have certain problems but he literally came back and won a tournament for his country, and dismantled a rival nation outright humiliating India.

I don't see how you could call him a fixer really.
Because he sold the country for a few pounds because he was greedy.

amir was above 20, he faked his age, everyone in pindi knows this. He was never a minor, had a fake age on the papers.
Amir first lied, he confessed when he knew there was no way out.
 
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