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POTW: Dr_Bassim

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Over the past month or so, we have seen some excellent and informative posts from [MENTION=43242]Dr_Bassim[/MENTION] on how Pakistan should approach T20s for best results and this week's POTW is a fine example of that.

Congratulations!


http://www.pakpassion.net/ppforum/showthread.php?307867-T20-cricket-The-Winning-Approach


Many years ago, there was a criminal who committed a crime.

The king gave him an option to choose to die by rope or take what's behind the big dark mysterious iron door. The criminal immediately chose the rope. As the noose was being tightened around him, he asked the thing, what is behind the "Big mysterious dark door". The king laughed and said nearly everyone asks the same question. So, what is behind that dark door, the criminal insisted.

The king said "Freedom, but most people are so scared of whats behind the unknown, they choose the rope"

Pakistan team is winning matches no doubt. It is winning matches, that it regularly lost perhaps a year or two ago.

But they are failing to WIN games that matter the most. Be it the final of the T20 World Cup, the final of the Asia Cup, the final against a very good T20 team England (being 3-2 up in the series), they have consistently ended up on the losing side.

I am going to focus the rest of the article not on HOW well we played a one-off match against India or bilaterals, but our failure in critical knockout games repeatedly.

A quick look at the issue shows that the middle order is not good enough.
I will bite the bitter pill and accept that the middle order could perhaps be tons better. That is fact. It is undeniable.

But many people are oblivious to the fact that since the middle order is so terrible and since the openers are failing to make runs at a pace that is good enough in CRUCIAL matches, there is something wrong in the psyche of the team that needs to change.

I propose the main problem Pakistan is faced with is that the head coach, captain and everyone else in the team is considering AVERAGES as the hallmark of a good T20 player. Since Babar and Rizwan have legendary averages in T20, they are super. They must be doing something right. And that means, they get away with whatever approach or method they use. There is very little critical analysis of how they play as long as they reach the 50 or 70 runs in the innings.

This creates a double-edged sword problem. If Babar and Rizwan are striking 50 to 70 runs in every game, Pakistan should consistently hit scores above 200 in KNOCKOUT games.

But they aren't. Even though they score, they score at a pace which gives just about enough time for middle order to throw their bat at everything and make some extra runs. But the middle order is NOT capable enough to this. They are definitely poor in form and performance. We end up short.

We have had 3 finals (T20 World Cup, Asia Cup, T20 versus England) where this approach has failed and we have lost.

Now when anyone proposes a change. A new approach, Perhaps a faster opener at the cost of demoting one of the openers, the law of averages tells us that the guy who enters won't average 50 like Rizwan or 45 like Babar. But he DOESN'T NEED TO. All he needs to do is to score 30 off 15 balls and go back to the hut.

That extra 30 runs we are NOT able to score at the end of the innings, could be critical and we can try to score them while opening.

So what in T20 does help win? Yes, you probably need one of Babar or Rizwan to come down at 3 and do the same thing of holding one end. But the other end simply has to be made of strikers who come and go.

In T20 its not even the STRIKE RATE that helps win. That is a misconception. A huge one. If that was the case, a guy who hits 12 of 2 balls would help his team win. He doesn't help either even though he has a SR of 200.

In T20 it is the "impact" that a player has on a game that defines a win.
Why do you think the major teams of the world are looking for a Warner, Green or Allen at the top to open for them? Is it because they are looking at AVERAGE or STRIKE RATE? No.

They are looking for impact. They know if Allen scores 30 from 15 balls, NZ have a start of 60/1 in 6 overs. That means rest of the team has to score 140 in 14 overs to hit 200 which is probably going to be a winning score 90 percent of the time.

If you score 40/0 in 6 overs and end up with 80 in 10 overs and around 100/2 in 12 overs even though it looks good on paper, you are asking the middle order to score 100 runs in the last 8 overs to get to 200. The openers have hit their 50s. But the team has lost as the middle order won't be able to hit 100 in 8 overs.

So what brings that stubborn and refusal to change.

Its the unknown. What if it goes worse than what we have?

People get scared. People act like the criminal who chose the rope because it was the fear of the unknown. They consistently put forward the trailing argument that openers are scoring the 50 runs and the rest of the team has to do better.

Unless Pakistan does not understand that T20 is not about averages and strike-rates but about the impact a batsman has in the team, they won't win the crucial knockout games.

They will continue to loiter just at the edge, hoping for a magical Babar or Rizwan innings to bail them which will never come.
 
THe legendary DR.Bassim. Loved to read his post back in the day, good to see him back posting and still posting quality.

I dont agree with his views, but he gives good argument and comes across polite. Top post Dr. Saab
 
There was a time when the captain used to get criticised for not coming up the order to steady the shop before the collapse happened. How we longed for those days to end.
Now we have the opposite problem :)
Good post
 
For the record Pakistan's big games will be won by bowling because of the batting we have.
So the question becomes what consistently gets you to 170 - and the answer is batting like we do
 
Good post by Dr sahib but missing the main issue of Pakistan team, there is no one who will score 30 runs in 15 balls often at the topmore than once. If there was anyone there had been plenty of time Pakistan lost one or both openers early for others to show their striking force. Today's inning by Shan will not get repeated in a pressurised international game against quality bowling, not two returning bowlers making a comeback after longish break, Stoke is a fourth choice bowler at best anyhow.
 
I agree with the gist of it and the thought process.

However, the reason why this does not work with Pakistan is because there is no one in the Pakistan domestic (as of now) who can strike a 30 off 15 balls in the Powerplay. We can say that a 30 off 15 balls is more impactful (which it probably is) but there is literally no one in Pakistan who can actually go and do it CONSISTENTLY.

Also a 30 off 15 balls in the Powerplay works when you have a middle order that can feast on that start and muscle the score to 200. The middle order is so horrible that even a 66/1 start in the warmup against England meant Pakistan ended up with 160. If Finn Allen scores a 30 off 15 balls but has a batting lineup of Papua New Guinea to follow, then Allen's 30 off 15 is literally of no use. Probably a 80 off 55 balls would be of much more use.

The reason why I stick with Rizwan and Babar is not because I love them too much, but it's because they raise the possibility of Pakistan scoring 200. It's not a coincidence that the most times Pakistan have scored 200 is when Babar and Rizwan have been opening.
 
Good write up. And long story story as Dr Bassim is saying is two-fold:

a) Push one of Babar or Riz to #3 position.and have Fakhar go ballistic as an opener, hoping that he delivers 30 in 15 balls (to get the score to 40-1 in 4 overs)

and

b) Have real strikers in the middle order who play fearlessly and score at 175-200SR

Theoretically, this makes 100% sense.

Practically where this theory falls apart is (b) where we got 0 middle order who can play at 175-200 SR for even a period of 3-4 overs.

As a result, we go back to the current approach (the "old school" approach) which Dr Bassim is 100% accurate in saying that it works sometimes, but in crunch knock-out games it doesn't as we saw in 2021 SF, Asia Cup Final and 7th T20 v Eng
 
Fakhar Zaman can score 30 of 15..and yes, one of these need to come down a notch.

Pakistan do need the extra 20 to 30 runs that they seem to be missing every game...YES, middle order is not as strong as, say England, but they have to find a way.

The way to find a way, is to change. Change what you have been doing?

Just try.

See what happens.
 
I agree with the gist of it and the thought process.

However, the reason why this does not work with Pakistan is because there is no one in the Pakistan domestic (as of now) who can strike a 30 off 15 balls in the Powerplay. We can say that a 30 off 15 balls is more impactful (which it probably is) but there is literally no one in Pakistan who can actually go and do it CONSISTENTLY.

Also a 30 off 15 balls in the Powerplay works when you have a middle order that can feast on that start and muscle the score to 200. The middle order is so horrible that even a 66/1 start in the warmup against England meant Pakistan ended up with 160. If Finn Allen scores a 30 off 15 balls but has a batting lineup of Papua New Guinea to follow, then Allen's 30 off 15 is literally of no use. Probably a 80 off 55 balls would be of much more use.

The reason why I stick with Rizwan and Babar is not because I love them too much, but it's because they raise the possibility of Pakistan scoring 200. It's not a coincidence that the most times Pakistan have scored 200 is when Babar and Rizwan have been opening.

Ridiculous comment.

Saim Ayub
Sharjeel Khan
Faizan Khan
Muhammad Akhlaq
Fakhar Zaman

All are more than capable of hitting 30 off 15 in the powerplay. Please don’t try to misguide people here.
 
Ridiculous comment.

Saim Ayub
Sharjeel Khan
Faizan Khan
Muhammad Akhlaq
Fakhar Zaman

All are more than capable of hitting 30 off 15 in the powerplay. Please don’t try to misguide people here.

Powerplay strike rates of aforementioned players in all t20's(leagues + international)

1. Saim Ayub = 105.06
2 Sharjeel Khan = 125.74
3. Muhammad Akhlaq = 121
4. Fakhar Zaman = 128

Babar = 116
Rizwan = 122
 
Good write up Even though i dont agree with a lot of whats been said
 
Powerplay strike rates of aforementioned players in all t20's(leagues + international)

1. Saim Ayub = 105.06
2 Sharjeel Khan = 125.74
3. Muhammad Akhlaq = 121
4. Fakhar Zaman = 128

Babar = 116
Rizwan = 122

Besides Fakhar Zaman, you haven’t seen any of them play.

Please don’t try being begani Shadi main Abdullah deewana
 
Although I agree with the premise of the post, I don't think this is a short term fix. This problem will take years to address because what you are asking our players to do they don't have the skills for. Now you have to wait for the next generation to get caught up with the brand of cricket that other teams are playing.
 
Besides Fakhar Zaman, you haven’t seen any of them play.

Please don’t try being begani Shadi main Abdullah deewana

Last 2 years , Sharjeel strike rate 117 in all t20s powerplay and Rizwan 124.

Watching them play? Lmao. You are just sour that Rizwan is probably just as good an opener as any available in Pakistan.

Differences are marginal if any.
 
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