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The bitter truth: A middling World Cup position reflects Pakistan are a middling ODI team (Markhor)

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Many thanks to [MENTION=53290]Markhor[/MENTION] for an excellent review of Pakistan's ICC World Cup 2019 campaign which ended yesterday.

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Pakistan played true to stereotype in the 2019 World Cup. Buzzwords such as “unpredictable”, “mercurial” and “blowing hot and cold” are viewed as lazy Orientalist caricatures of Pakistan cricket by fans longing for a more consistent side, but the World Cup saw a team capable of glorious highs and incomprehensible lows with little middle ground. However, the irony is Pakistan’s World Cup position occupies that very middle ground. Not consistent enough to break into the top four, but a cut above the rest.

Since January 2010, Pakistan has been amongst the top 9 ODI sides. Pakistan’s ODI ranking heading into the 2019 World Cup ? 6th. It’s World Cup position? 5th. This is and has been a distinctly mid-table ODI side. Yet some television pundits and fans are making out as if Pakistan have been robbed by the cricketing gods !

Already there’s much grumbling about Net Run Rate (NRR) determining qualification from the group stages. But the fact remains that the only conspiracy is the way Pakistan conspired to shoot themselves in the foot through a series of muddled selection decisions, tactical errors and poor execution – most notably in the shambolic opening match collapse against the short ball barrage from West Indies that proved fatal for NRR, and a horrendous new ball display versus Australia on a damp Taunton wicket. In batting, bowling and fielding – Pakistan seldom brought all three facets of their game together.


Batting

Pakistan’s top order was much heralded going into this tournament. The “FBI” trio of Fakhar Zaman, Babar Azam and Imam-ul-Haq presented the strongest top order since the days of Saeed Anwar, Aamir Sohail and Ijaz Ahmed. However, the hero of the 2017 Champions Trophy, Fakhar Zaman failed to live up to expectations with a number of soft dismissals against spin. Imam, except for an excellent hundred in the final match versus Bangladesh, failed to cash in on good starts.

That meant an over-reliance on Babar Azam, who again reminded the world of his prodigious talent. With a compact technique, an array of shots against pace and spin, and arguably the best backfoot game since Mohammed Yousuf, the youngster took on the mantle of leader of Pakistan’s batting unit. This was exemplified in the Edgbaston runchase versus New Zealand. In front of a raucous crowd and on a tricky used surface, Babar stayed till the end to keep Pakistan’s campaign alive.

However, it was not Babar, but the two seniors Mohammad Hafeez and Shoaib Malik who were described as “the backbone of the team” by captain Sarfaraz Ahmed before the tournament. Yet both delivered a spinelessperformance especially in the grudge match versus India when their experience was needed the most. Hafeez delivered only one substantial knock against England at Trent Bridge, thanks to some charity from Jason Roy’s hands, and was repeatedly dismissed throughout the tournament whilst attempting to hit part-timers out of the attack. Malik, despite possessing an average of 13 in England, was selected in the final 15 and predictably failed. With scores of 8, 0 and 0 along with 18 months of mediocre form – one asks WHY Pakistani culture fetishes seniority to an unhealthy extent?


Bowling

The bowling failed to perform as a collective unit, relying on the seasoned left-arm duo of Mohammad Amir and Wahab Riaz, with the youngster Shaheen Shah Afridi only finding the right length for English conditions late in the tournament. Amir was not even in the original squad but intelligent changes of pace and accuracy ensured his place amongst the tournament’s leading wicket-takers. Riaz, who spoke of “dreaming” about Chief Selector Inzamam-ul-Haq calling him for the World Cup after exclusion from the preliminary squad, was outstanding at the death with his fast reverse swinging yorkers.

The biggest disappointment was Hasan Ali. Another star of the 2017 Champions Trophy. Hasan’s line and length was all over the place and dismal figures of 2/256 at an economy of nearly 8 runs per over suggests the youngster may join a long line of Pakistani cricketers who started their careers with a bang before fading away.

Shadab Khan and Imad Wasim did little to allay the concerns of those who feel Pakistan need more penetration in the middle overs - although it has to be said that most spinners have struggled on English pitches in the tournament. Nevertheless, the pace trio of Amir, Riaz and Afridi emerged as a positive and would’ve taken more wickets had it not been for appalling catching.


Fielding

Sadly, whatever gains were made from the Steve Rixon era are fast being eroded. Whilst Mickey Arthur’s team is fitter and faster than the one he inherited – far too many simple catches were shelled. Asif Ali’s drops in the Australia game proved especially costly.


Captaincy

Much will be said about Sarfaraz Ahmed’s captaincy future. Indeed much was said after “the yawn seen round the world” moment during the India game. Whilst one appreciates his passion and fighting spirit, Sarfaraz continued to make tactical errors. Time and again, a Pakistani bowler would find an outside edge of a new batsman only to rue the lack of a slip fielder. Sarfaraz’s bowling changes were also peculiar, often looking to bowl out the 50 overs than bowl out the opposition by saving his best bowlers for late despite taking early wickets. New Zealand and Afghanistan ended up with 40-50 more runs than deserved. One could learn from Australia’s Aaron Finch and how Mitchell Starc is brought on to kill off a game whenever a threatening partnership develops instead of trying to get his weaker bowlers’ overs out of the way first. Worse for Sarfaraz, his batting form for the last 18 months in all formats has nosedived with the World Cup producing only one fifty. One wonders whether the Sarfaraz of 2014-16 will re-emerge if the burdens of captaincy are lifted>


Conclusions

Ultimately the 1992 clichés went stale - jazba and junoon alone is no substitute for proper planning. Pakistan simply lacked the consistency needed to succeed in this round robin format with three glaring holes that must be filled to avoid another group stage exit in 2023. The first is a gun spinner, critical to succeed in Indian conditions. The lack of a quality right-arm pacer is another, as well as a reliable middle-order batsman.

Nevertheless, Pakistan proved by winning its last four matches on the trot, and beating the home favourites England, that there’s a promising and talented young core. One hopes that the new PCB administration led by Ehsan Mani and Wasim Khan avoid the acrimony and recriminations that followed Pakistan’s previous four World Cup campaigns.

Making wholesale changes to personnel and management yet again will not produce a magic formula for success. Replacing the coaches or selectors are superficial short-term changes. Rather they must take a long-term view and ask themselves this - is it a coincidence the top four teams of this World Cup are those with the strongest domestic structures?

If Pakistan are to ever kick the inconsistency tag, and rise from its current mid-table mediocrity, they must look at its grassroots system where young talent emerges. The gap between domestic and internationals is larger than ever hence numerous investments in players failing to pay off for Pakistan in this tournament. As former coach Waqar Younis said after overseeing a group stage exit from the 2016 T20 World Cup – fix the system or we cry again in four years’ time !
 
Pakistan actually played pretty well. I am impressed the way they have come back in the latter half. They have good talent , Babar has been consistent, Haris and Imad has been very good as well. Bowling is good as well with all the pacers pitching in.

I think they can do even better in future with a better captain. There is a lazy elegance how this team plays, but with a professional team management at helm they can easily be the top 3-4 teams in future.
 
Pakistan won 5 and lost 3. They should've won 6 as SL game got washed out.

I think they did better than what they did in 2015 WC.
 
It was not that bad a campaign for us as numbers would suggest. We almost had it all sorted towards the later part of the tournament however that West Indies game really cost us a semi final berth. Who knows what could have happened had we made it to semis. Winning 4 must win games in a row in the world cup is no mean feat in itself.
 
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The other day I was talking to a friend of mine about Pakistan , I think Pak was really unlucky to miss our game. Pak would have easily won that.

While PAK missed out on a game that they would have won.
NZ missed out on a game that they would have lost.

Having said that, I feel the biggest issue with Pakistan in the batting department is a stroke maker. A saner version of. Sohaib Maqsood or Umar Akmal. Is Sharjerl too old for this for 2023?

No doubt Fakhar, Imam, Babar , Haris will be the top order. Afridi and Amir are confirmed in the bowling department, although I'm not too sure how effective Amir will be in 2023 with his age.

Shadab can improve his game, both in batting and bowling.

Sarfaraz will have to go, he will put on and be ineffective in 4 years time. A proper WK who's a batter needs to be groomed from now itself.

A proper spinner , a fast bowling all rounder and the power hitter discussed above is what Pak needs to find.
 
if we remove Sarfraz, it will undo all the good work and we have to start from scratch again. Media believes most likely captain will be Imad which will only worse the situation. Because he doesnt have confirm place in the team, he can be a good no.6 bat for us but his bowling is not quite upto the mark. Second option is Babar who comes across as a softie, feeble person. With no captaincy experience at FC level, it would be too risky to give him the role. It may also adversely affect his batting.

My choice for captaincy would be Amir, but make him the vice for now and let him play under Sarfraz for a couple of years atleast. He is smart, has better communication skills and more importantly he has much better reading of the game, pitch assessment.
 
I don't think Sarfaraz brings anything to this team anymore. He is no longer the batsman that he was, his on field behaviour with team is very impulsive and he is rarely in control. It's time for you to have a fresh start and rebuild. As I said you have good talent, just do not stick to Sarfaraz. Amir is also a bad choice, with match fixing and inconsistent performance in UAE/Pak.
 
I think Pakistan kicked well above their weight considering their form for the last couple of years.
 
I think Pakistan kicked well above their weight considering their form for the last couple of years.

Agreed as Pakistan tried too many combos the last two years with never getting around to dumping "senior" players. Additionally, our Chief Selector only picked players after a successful PSL season, T20 tournament with not much similarities with ODI.

In the tournament Pakistan finally gelled after dropping Malik and Hassan Ali. Malik should never have been part of the squad let alone in the playing eleven. Hasan Ali is a good bowler whom we never gave a break for the past 1-2 years which ultimately caused his decline. Opposite of this is true for Amir as he was rejuvenated after getting a break from playing constant cricket.

In the end they played much better than how they had performed before the world cup but got little unlucky to miss the semi final.
 
Mediocre players dont make a good captain.
Sarfraz himself being average could not drop experienced losers hafeez and malik 1 year prior to the WC and build a solid team.
If you have hafeez playing at age 40 as ur no.4 then dont expect good results
 
Media believes most likely captain will be Imad which will only worse the situation. Because he doesnt have confirm place in the team, he can be a good no.6 bat for us but his bowling is not quite upto the mark.
To be honest, i don't really understand his style of bowling. He doesn't spin the ball. His approach is to float the ball and get lbw with the sharp incoming delivery i guess. I don't know if he has potential to improve with this bowling action. I don't see him ever playing test cricket for Pakistan. However, i like the guy, he seems sorted in head and gives his best everytime he comes to field.
 
Not sure about middling position. They played as the third best team in a 10 team tournament, having beaten England and New Zealand along with South Africa.

They have two of the top five wicket takers and some exceptional batting performances.

A change in captain, removal of a couple passengers and tightening of the fielding will really propel this team forward.
 
To be honest, i don't really understand his style of bowling. He doesn't spin the ball. His approach is to float the ball and get lbw with the sharp incoming delivery i guess. I don't know if he has potential to improve with this bowling action. I don't see him ever playing test cricket for Pakistan. However, i like the guy, he seems sorted in head and gives his best everytime he comes to field.

at the start of his career in UAE, Imad had a great drift like Murali Karthik. From round the wicket angle, the ball dipping in and straightening ever so slightly to trap batsmen LBW. He got truckloads of wicket but then he lost the drift after injury.
 
Please no more Fakhar, all teams have figured out that he cannot play spin and attack with spinner on one end. His time is over. Thanks for his CT final century and best of luck for T20 leagues around the world.
 
Excellent review. Sarf needs to go. Mickey needs to stay. As simple as that. Team is good with Malik and hopefully Hafeez out. Wahab did his thing and should be left alone as well. He won't be playing the next WC. The number of 300+ scores Pak made in the last few months showed the batting mettle. Pick Rizwan as the keeper batsman and choose a solid opener instead of the hack Fakhar. Take the template of top teams like Eng, Ind, AUS. Openers are capable of scoring hundreds and are not hacks. This is not a lottery. New opener, Imam, Babar, Haris, Rizwan, new batsman, Imad, Shadab, Amir, Shaheen, right arm pacer. Groom this team under Mickey and be consistent.
 
Make Babar the captain of the team. Mickey is still the Alpha in the team and that will help Babar. Make Amir VC as someone suggested. It's time to take action and be decisive instead of endless reviews with new management and same captain
 
Pakistan actually played pretty well. I am impressed the way they have come back in the latter half. They have good talent , Babar has been consistent, Haris and Imad has been very good as well. Bowling is good as well with all the pacers pitching in.

I think they can do even better in future with a better captain. There is a lazy elegance how this team plays, but with a professional team management at helm they can easily be the top 3-4 teams in future.

This.

Just look at it that PAK only ended 1 point below ENG. The same ENG that were massive faveroures to win this WC but had to sweat it out till their last to keep PAK out.

Rain played a massive role this WC. Eng didnt get a game washed out amd NZ got a game washed out vs table toppers.

PAK was one of the better teams this world cup and played amazing cricket in the last 4 games.
 
Can pakistan defeat NZ and SA in an odi series? Won't be that easy
Pak drew 1-1 with NewZealand in the neutral ground of UAE and only rain saved NZ from series defeat; Pak also defeated them in England.
Rain saved SA in their home ground from Pak levelling the series, and we beat them in world cup as well. So see no reason why this improved Pak team cannot beat both of those teams.
 
Pakistan is ranked 6th. Due to favourable pitches and ground, Pakistan did exceedingly well to come 5th.

Overall Pakistan is 6-7th.

So England got into finals due to favourable pitches?
In fact bad catching display made Pak lose many matches or prevented Pak from better margin wins. If anything we did not have rub of green go in our favour.
 
Well written. You have summed it up well in the title. This team performed according to its quality, not too bad, not too good. I would say it performed better than the 2015, 2007 and 2003 World Cup teams.
 
Wallace Stevens, a twentieth century American poet, once wrote “the imagination is the power of the mind over the possibilities of things.” For a period of time the Pakistan cricket team had stirred the imagination. After a damning defeat to the West Indies, they were on their worst ODI run ever, let us not forget. Yet, they did turn things around eventually and that did require strength of mind and the power of imagination. For a period the fans became believers as well. The fevered atmosphere against NZ at Egbaston was for me the high point.

A belief that the stars were somehow aligning in favour of Pakistan was undone in the end by something as unadorned as net run rate. Quite funny really.
 
Can pakistan defeat NZ and SA in an odi series? Won't be that easy
We just beat both of them in the World Cup, how is an ODI series even comparable?

Overall, Pakistan had a good tournament and were unlucky to miss out on a semi final place.
The earlier defeat to West Indies was crucial as were the rained off games for both the teams finishing on 11 points.
We have some good young talent that need to be persisted with and we need to find a new opener alongside Imam, a batting all-rounder to replace Hafeez, a proper wk-batter capable of playing in the top 6 and a bowling all rounder.
Mickey Arthur needs to be kept on board so that we continue our development in line with the modern way of playing.
We need to plan for 2023 and need to be honest about Haris, Imad and Amir - they should only be persisted with if their performances are good or until we discover new talent that can take their places before 2023.
 
I agree with much of the content of the article, but it's not much of a bitter truth for me as I didn't rate this Pakistan team at all going into the competition. If anything they performed better than I expected once they got the selection right.

Pakistan lost out on a semi final place because of of misplaced faith on old timers who were past their best, and also failed to recognise that true quality batsmanship from the like of Haris will always be more important than half-cooked slogging from the likes of Fakhar and Asif.
 
It also did not help Pakistan that they lost a bunch of games before the start of the WC - seemed like an under-confident side till they started putting some games together. Maybe that's what caused the WI stumble and eventually resulted in their elimination.

They looked a lot more confident and dangerous side at the end of the RR stage.
 
Wholesale removal of senior players will make Pak cricket go the Sri Lankan way

I write this as an India cricket fan who has been observing the gradual decline of Pakistan cricket, as an outsider. What the reasons for this precipitous decline from the great days of Pakistan cricket of the 70s, 80s, and early 90s, I have little idea.

Inept management/administration of Pakistan cricket, lack of adequate infrastructure, insufficient international games with quality teams, ad hoc selection policies, improper mentoring of younger talent, nepotism/favoritism, etc have often been cited as reasons for the decline. I don't know any better.

Now that the world cup has ended without Pakistan in the semi finals, we hear this constant demands from fans and Pakistani media that senior players need to be removed and removed immediately to make way for promising youngster waiting in the wings.

My counter argument is this...

Iconic Pakistani veteran cricketers like Shahid Afridi, Younis Khan, Misbah, and a few others have retired in recent years. The last Pakistan match of WC2019 was Malik's last. There are now growing calls to retire Hafeez and Sarfaraz as well.

With so many senior Pakistan players retiring in quick succession will Pakistan cricket face even greater declines in fortunes. Much like Sri Lanka did, and continues to experience, after the retirements of Mahela, Sangakara, and other legendary seniors in quick succession.

Are the emotions of Pakistani fans and cricketing experts of Pakistani media, getting the better of their rational minds?

Even right here on this forum there are several threads fantasizing about Pakistani team showing up at the next world cup with a line up that is going to be the envy of the world. Of Pakistan team assembling a fearsome bowling attack of tear away pacers that will run through oppositions in the World cup in India.

Pak media cricket specialists are talking about removing seniors from this Pakistan team and replacing them with young specialist batsmen who can rival the top batting line up of India and England.

Does no one stop to consider the unexpected challenges of wholesale removal of seniors from the Pakistan team, some of who have rendered their service to Pakistan for over 10/15 years? No matter how well PCB has planned for this change of guard, Pakistan cricket shall encounter a lot of turbulence, which may last a long long time.

Though I have myself been disappointed by Sarfaraz's fitness levels and on field performance, he deserves credit for the way he has taken the massive outrage from fans and media. And how he has managed to keep the team together without too many instances of groupism or personality clashes in the team, coming out in the open. He has himself calmed down a lot from years ago.

Maybe his steady hands and growing stature is what Pakistan cricket and team needs, while minor and long term changes are gradually made in the team, in a way that minimized the turbulence to Pakistani cricket.

I hope saner minds prevail among Pakistani fans, media, and PCB, before all seniors are forced out in quick succession.
 
Sri Lanka lost legends like Sangakara and Mahela Jayawerdene , we are trying to get rid of dead woods like Hafeez, Malik and Sarfraz, the difference is obvious and result will be different too.
 
I think this post lacks a bit of nuance though I agree with some of it, namely that Pakistan’s planning for the tournament was muddled and the selection both of the squad and of the XI (in Australia game) was not good. This has to be reflected on.

But as I’m sure others have already pointed out, we did have a strong XI on the park in the last four games which had a lot of bases covered. If they continue to perform the way they did in those last four games, they will have a successful future. I think public is showing patience with them because they were the youngest side in the tournament and have a long way to go in their cricketing careers.
 
The table does not ever tell lies. We are an average side at best. I am amazed that no one in the support staff pointed out how poor our run rate was after the heavy loss to the West Indies. Sikander Bakht said their were over 40 people with the Pak team yet no one had the sense to mention this at all. In the final match the team showed to interest in trying to get at least 400 giving us half a chance at least. At worst we would have lost to Bangladesh, at best we could have qualified for the semi finals as well.
 
Many thanks to [MENTION=53290]Markhor[/MENTION] for an excellent review of Pakistan's ICC World Cup 2019 campaign which ended yesterday.

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291795.jpg



Pakistan played true to stereotype in the 2019 World Cup. Buzzwords such as “unpredictable”, “mercurial” and “blowing hot and cold” are viewed as lazy Orientalist caricatures of Pakistan cricket by fans longing for a more consistent side, but the World Cup saw a team capable of glorious highs and incomprehensible lows with little middle ground. However, the irony is Pakistan’s World Cup position occupies that very middle ground. Not consistent enough to break into the top four, but a cut above the rest.

Since January 2010, Pakistan has been amongst the top 9 ODI sides. Pakistan’s ODI ranking heading into the 2019 World Cup ? 6th. It’s World Cup position? 5th. This is and has been a distinctly mid-table ODI side. Yet some television pundits and fans are making out as if Pakistan have been robbed by the cricketing gods !

Already there’s much grumbling about Net Run Rate (NRR) determining qualification from the group stages. But the fact remains that the only conspiracy is the way Pakistan conspired to shoot themselves in the foot through a series of muddled selection decisions, tactical errors and poor execution – most notably in the shambolic opening match collapse against the short ball barrage from West Indies that proved fatal for NRR, and a horrendous new ball display versus Australia on a damp Taunton wicket. In batting, bowling and fielding – Pakistan seldom brought all three facets of their game together.


Batting

Pakistan’s top order was much heralded going into this tournament. The “FBI” trio of Fakhar Zaman, Babar Azam and Imam-ul-Haq presented the strongest top order since the days of Saeed Anwar, Aamir Sohail and Ijaz Ahmed. However, the hero of the 2017 Champions Trophy, Fakhar Zaman failed to live up to expectations with a number of soft dismissals against spin. Imam, except for an excellent hundred in the final match versus Bangladesh, failed to cash in on good starts.

That meant an over-reliance on Babar Azam, who again reminded the world of his prodigious talent. With a compact technique, an array of shots against pace and spin, and arguably the best backfoot game since Mohammed Yousuf, the youngster took on the mantle of leader of Pakistan’s batting unit. This was exemplified in the Edgbaston runchase versus New Zealand. In front of a raucous crowd and on a tricky used surface, Babar stayed till the end to keep Pakistan’s campaign alive.

However, it was not Babar, but the two seniors Mohammad Hafeez and Shoaib Malik who were described as “the backbone of the team” by captain Sarfaraz Ahmed before the tournament. Yet both delivered a spinelessperformance especially in the grudge match versus India when their experience was needed the most. Hafeez delivered only one substantial knock against England at Trent Bridge, thanks to some charity from Jason Roy’s hands, and was repeatedly dismissed throughout the tournament whilst attempting to hit part-timers out of the attack. Malik, despite possessing an average of 13 in England, was selected in the final 15 and predictably failed. With scores of 8, 0 and 0 along with 18 months of mediocre form – one asks WHY Pakistani culture fetishes seniority to an unhealthy extent?


Bowling

The bowling failed to perform as a collective unit, relying on the seasoned left-arm duo of Mohammad Amir and Wahab Riaz, with the youngster Shaheen Shah Afridi only finding the right length for English conditions late in the tournament. Amir was not even in the original squad but intelligent changes of pace and accuracy ensured his place amongst the tournament’s leading wicket-takers. Riaz, who spoke of “dreaming” about Chief Selector Inzamam-ul-Haq calling him for the World Cup after exclusion from the preliminary squad, was outstanding at the death with his fast reverse swinging yorkers.

The biggest disappointment was Hasan Ali. Another star of the 2017 Champions Trophy. Hasan’s line and length was all over the place and dismal figures of 2/256 at an economy of nearly 8 runs per over suggests the youngster may join a long line of Pakistani cricketers who started their careers with a bang before fading away.

Shadab Khan and Imad Wasim did little to allay the concerns of those who feel Pakistan need more penetration in the middle overs - although it has to be said that most spinners have struggled on English pitches in the tournament. Nevertheless, the pace trio of Amir, Riaz and Afridi emerged as a positive and would’ve taken more wickets had it not been for appalling catching.


Fielding

Sadly, whatever gains were made from the Steve Rixon era are fast being eroded. Whilst Mickey Arthur’s team is fitter and faster than the one he inherited – far too many simple catches were shelled. Asif Ali’s drops in the Australia game proved especially costly.


Captaincy

Much will be said about Sarfaraz Ahmed’s captaincy future. Indeed much was said after “the yawn seen round the world” moment during the India game. Whilst one appreciates his passion and fighting spirit, Sarfaraz continued to make tactical errors. Time and again, a Pakistani bowler would find an outside edge of a new batsman only to rue the lack of a slip fielder. Sarfaraz’s bowling changes were also peculiar, often looking to bowl out the 50 overs than bowl out the opposition by saving his best bowlers for late despite taking early wickets. New Zealand and Afghanistan ended up with 40-50 more runs than deserved. One could learn from Australia’s Aaron Finch and how Mitchell Starc is brought on to kill off a game whenever a threatening partnership develops instead of trying to get his weaker bowlers’ overs out of the way first. Worse for Sarfaraz, his batting form for the last 18 months in all formats has nosedived with the World Cup producing only one fifty. One wonders whether the Sarfaraz of 2014-16 will re-emerge if the burdens of captaincy are lifted>


Conclusions

Ultimately the 1992 clichés went stale - jazba and junoon alone is no substitute for proper planning. Pakistan simply lacked the consistency needed to succeed in this round robin format with three glaring holes that must be filled to avoid another group stage exit in 2023. The first is a gun spinner, critical to succeed in Indian conditions. The lack of a quality right-arm pacer is another, as well as a reliable middle-order batsman.

Nevertheless, Pakistan proved by winning its last four matches on the trot, and beating the home favourites England, that there’s a promising and talented young core. One hopes that the new PCB administration led by Ehsan Mani and Wasim Khan avoid the acrimony and recriminations that followed Pakistan’s previous four World Cup campaigns.

Making wholesale changes to personnel and management yet again will not produce a magic formula for success. Replacing the coaches or selectors are superficial short-term changes. Rather they must take a long-term view and ask themselves this - is it a coincidence the top four teams of this World Cup are those with the strongest domestic structures?

If Pakistan are to ever kick the inconsistency tag, and rise from its current mid-table mediocrity, they must look at its grassroots system where young talent emerges. The gap between domestic and internationals is larger than ever hence numerous investments in players failing to pay off for Pakistan in this tournament. As former coach Waqar Younis said after overseeing a group stage exit from the 2016 T20 World Cup – fix the system or we cry again in four years’ time !


An enjoyable read and would agree with a number of these points. However, a couple of points that I would include:

1. Batting - any discussion of the batting needs to include one of the biggest positives, Haris Sohail's performance especially against South Africa and New Zealand (2 contrasting performances).

2. Pakistan's overall performances - I wholeheartedly believe that Pakistan actually performed much better than their recent ODI record actually suggests. You only have to look at their performance in the last 12 months and it would be noted that before the world cup we played 27 matches. Of those we won only 10 matches, 1 NR and have lost the rest (i.e. 16 of 27).

Look further into those wins and this includes 5 wins against Zimbabwe and 1 against Afghanistan. So, only 4 wins against established test teams (apologies to both Zimbabwe and Afghanistan as I respect their performances but have to exclude fixtures against them for the purposes of this analysis). 4 wins against the established test nations out of the last 27 is an extremely poor performance leading into the world cup.

When i then look at their performance in this world cup of 5 wins out of 8 completed matches, i would argue that we have had a good world cup. Moreover, 1 win in the first 5 games followed by 4 consecutive wins confirms what i believe is a team that was just gaining momentum. Unfortunately, it was just a bit too late and confirms that you can't afford to only win 1 of your first 5 games in a tournament.
 
Sometimes it’s not how you start but how you finish, but for a stupid rule like run rate, we’d be preparing for the semi now
 
Sometimes it’s not how you start but how you finish, but for a stupid rule like run rate, we’d be preparing for the semi now

Sure you could argue H2H would better, but let's say it was Australia in 4th and Pakistan had a better NRR with the H2H system in place (assuming Pakistan still lost to Australia in this hypothetical scenario). People would complain that NRR wasn't used to let Pakistan into 4th because "that's how it worked in the past". Either way, a system where two teams on the same points have to be separated by one factor is going to cause issues.

H2H = Based on one game.
NRR= An average that can be heavily hampered by one big defeat for a team (also the toss, bowling first will always make your NRR worse in similar margins of victory/defeat).
Tie breaker game = Once again, based on one game and would have lots of variables that could be problematic.
 
Being a newbie to the world of cricket, it’s seriously surprising to see a team like India with so much financial and commercial backing to be compared to Pakistan which is hasn’t had a home game in over a decade! �� I can imagine how our national team would sore in its performance if they had all the advantages of India’s cricket team! Even with my limited knowledge about cricket at this stage, it’s not rocket science to know that when you don’t have a world class fitness, nutrition and psychological training program for your athletes as some of the other World Cup countries are fortunate to have, it’s almost a miracle that Pakistan has done so well - even if they didn’t make the semi finals.
 
Being a newbie to the world of cricket, it’s seriously surprising to see a team like India with so much financial and commercial backing to be compared to Pakistan which is hasn’t had a home game in over a decade! �� I can imagine how our national team would sore in its performance if they had all the advantages of India’s cricket team! Even with my limited knowledge about cricket at this stage, it’s not rocket science to know that when you don’t have a world class fitness, nutrition and psychological training program for your athletes as some of the other World Cup countries are fortunate to have, it’s almost a miracle that Pakistan has done so well - even if they didn’t make the semi finals.

I think the buzz word in world cricket right now is three-dimensional. And Shadab is three-dimensional.

Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur
 
A lot expected from Wasim Khan/PCB Committee findings - lets see how this pans out
 
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