You did not misread the title.
I think that Pakistan's chances in Australia have improved in recent days, not got worse.
Pretty much everything I warned about in New Zealand and Australia has happened. Younis and Misbah looked horrible with the bat, there was inadequate preparation and Sohail Khan averaged 38 with the ball in favourable conditions.
The final day at Hamilton saw Sami Aslam and Azhar Ali join Babar Azam in good touch. But the sudden collapse and 2-0 defeat has swept away the complacency and hubris and arrogance which saw Inzamam sleepwalk to disaster the day before by announcing an unchanged team for Australia.
This can only be good. Finally everyone is having to face up to the fact that Younis Khan can't be selected in the starting eleven unless he shows signs of being able to cope in Australia. And there is once more the prospect of reinforcements if someone imposes themselves upon the final stages of the Quaid E Azam trophy. Two days ago it was unthinkable that Younis might not be picked at Brisbane. Not any more.
And Sami Aslam, Azhar Ali and Babar Azam have adapted now, and each scored over 100 runs in a very low scoring series.
Babar Azam wasn't even a certain starter a week ago. Now he is quite obviously Pakistan's premier batsman.
That can only be a good thing.
The bowling is actually 75% covered.
Mohammad Amir averaged 28.57 in NZ and would have averaged in the teens if his catches were taken. Yasir Shah will be fine, and Rahat Ali's height will work well in Australia, as will Wahab Riaz's pace.
The problem is that Sohail Khan failed in NZ and there is no right-arm Asif-type to dry up the scoring rate. And no off-spinner to bowl to seven left-handers in the Aussie eleven, which suggests that Inzamam may not understand his job.
It's always hard for Asian teams to win in Australia. The batsmen tend not to cope with the bounce and the bowlers bowl too short.
But this Pakistan team has just had a month in NZ followed by two weeks in Australia.
And this Australia team is the weakest one for thirty years.
Warner, Khawaja, Smith, Starc and Hazlewood are all potential match winners.
But the other six are very, very dodgy.
Matt Renshaw is even more slow scoring than Azhar Ali, but he also has a big technical vulnerability in moving across his stumps. Michael Slater pulverised his technique on air.
Peter Handscomb is even more vulnerable to quality pace bowling: he bats so deep in his crease that if you pitch the ball on a full length he fishes for it.
Nic Maddinson is the high-risk unsound batsman that [MENTION=132373]Convict[/MENTION] has warned us all about.
Matt Wade makes a lot of noise (in Rugby League Land we wonder "who is this Gary Lyon?") but still can't catch and his colour blindness clearly affected his pink ball batting under lights.
Jackson Bird remains a moderate medium-fast bowler.
Nathan Lyon remains a moderate offie.
Best of all, whereas nobody knew what to expect with Colin De Grandhomme, Mickey Arthur has already seen the three rookie Aussie batsmen in a Day/Night pink ball Test, and will have made plans for them.
The balance of the Aussie team has gone with the loss of an all-rounder in Mitch Marsh, which means that Starc and Hazlewood get less rest. And they have just lost a series to the worst South Africa team for 50 years.
So maybe, just maybe, Pakistan has been jolted out of its complacency, and Mickey Arthur can send out the strongest eleven rather than be forced to pick Younis Khan even after 10 failures in 11 innings outside Asia this year.
I think that Pakistan's chances in Australia have improved in recent days, not got worse.
Pretty much everything I warned about in New Zealand and Australia has happened. Younis and Misbah looked horrible with the bat, there was inadequate preparation and Sohail Khan averaged 38 with the ball in favourable conditions.
The final day at Hamilton saw Sami Aslam and Azhar Ali join Babar Azam in good touch. But the sudden collapse and 2-0 defeat has swept away the complacency and hubris and arrogance which saw Inzamam sleepwalk to disaster the day before by announcing an unchanged team for Australia.
This can only be good. Finally everyone is having to face up to the fact that Younis Khan can't be selected in the starting eleven unless he shows signs of being able to cope in Australia. And there is once more the prospect of reinforcements if someone imposes themselves upon the final stages of the Quaid E Azam trophy. Two days ago it was unthinkable that Younis might not be picked at Brisbane. Not any more.
And Sami Aslam, Azhar Ali and Babar Azam have adapted now, and each scored over 100 runs in a very low scoring series.
Babar Azam wasn't even a certain starter a week ago. Now he is quite obviously Pakistan's premier batsman.
That can only be a good thing.
The bowling is actually 75% covered.
Mohammad Amir averaged 28.57 in NZ and would have averaged in the teens if his catches were taken. Yasir Shah will be fine, and Rahat Ali's height will work well in Australia, as will Wahab Riaz's pace.
The problem is that Sohail Khan failed in NZ and there is no right-arm Asif-type to dry up the scoring rate. And no off-spinner to bowl to seven left-handers in the Aussie eleven, which suggests that Inzamam may not understand his job.
It's always hard for Asian teams to win in Australia. The batsmen tend not to cope with the bounce and the bowlers bowl too short.
But this Pakistan team has just had a month in NZ followed by two weeks in Australia.
And this Australia team is the weakest one for thirty years.
Warner, Khawaja, Smith, Starc and Hazlewood are all potential match winners.
But the other six are very, very dodgy.
Matt Renshaw is even more slow scoring than Azhar Ali, but he also has a big technical vulnerability in moving across his stumps. Michael Slater pulverised his technique on air.
Peter Handscomb is even more vulnerable to quality pace bowling: he bats so deep in his crease that if you pitch the ball on a full length he fishes for it.
Nic Maddinson is the high-risk unsound batsman that [MENTION=132373]Convict[/MENTION] has warned us all about.
Matt Wade makes a lot of noise (in Rugby League Land we wonder "who is this Gary Lyon?") but still can't catch and his colour blindness clearly affected his pink ball batting under lights.
Jackson Bird remains a moderate medium-fast bowler.
Nathan Lyon remains a moderate offie.
Best of all, whereas nobody knew what to expect with Colin De Grandhomme, Mickey Arthur has already seen the three rookie Aussie batsmen in a Day/Night pink ball Test, and will have made plans for them.
The balance of the Aussie team has gone with the loss of an all-rounder in Mitch Marsh, which means that Starc and Hazlewood get less rest. And they have just lost a series to the worst South Africa team for 50 years.
So maybe, just maybe, Pakistan has been jolted out of its complacency, and Mickey Arthur can send out the strongest eleven rather than be forced to pick Younis Khan even after 10 failures in 11 innings outside Asia this year.