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"Was Sarfaraz Ahmed made captain so that he cannot question [the coach]?" : Younis Khan

So tell me this. In a hypothetical world, how should Pakistan win against India so that its not deemed a fluke? Crushing them by almost 200 runs apparently wasn't enough for you.

The margin of win does not dictate whether an outcome was a fluke or not.
I don't think you know how sports in general work to be honest. A competitive game between 2 teams is about who performs better on the day. Past performances have no direct impact on the outcome of a game on a given day. There might be psychological issues present in the players minds, but no factor that arises from the sport of cricket itself. If a team makes a comeback and wins 5 straight games in a row in a world tournament, then i would think that the team is gaining momentum and peaking at a good time rather than marching towards an all-time great fluke. No sports team wins a tournament without a bit of luck going their way. Luck gives teams a window of opportunity, and its up to the players and how they avail that chance. For example, Fakhar could have been out if that no ball wasn't bowled, but he made the most of that chance and it has lead to us having this conversation. You don't win a whole tournament because of a "fluke". And you definitely don't win a whole tournament because things just happen to go your way.

Let me explain how sports works: an inferior team will beat a superior team if the inferior team performs better on the day. However, if both the inferior and the superior team perform to the best of their capabilities, their is no possible chance of the inferior team winning simply because the skill-gap is huge.

Pakistan defeated three superior sides in consecutive games which is an extremely rare event, but there were reasons for why it happened. It is simply not a case of Pakistan playing wonderful cricket. Yes they did, but there were certain things that went in Pakistan's favor which were beyond their control. For example, the rain in the South Africa game prevented a jittery finish; Perera's butterfingers saved a match that we had pretty much shelled; England were undone by a sluggish pitch and Kohli made a tactical error by bowling first in the final.

All this talk of momentum etc. is a myth. Had we played England on a batting pitch in the SF, they would have shown us what momentum means. Had India batted in the Final and posted anything above 250, they would also have shown us what momentum means. We had "momentum" in the Mohali SF as well, having lost only one game and had obliterated WI in the QF.

What happened to our "momentum" in the NZ ODI series, the momentum that we gained by not-fluking the Champions and whitewashing SL? What happened to Australia's momentum of winning the Ashes 4-0? All this momentum means nothing. Surely with all the so-called momentum that we had gained over the last few months, we would have won at least two ODIs in NZ.

The excuse of having non-performing seniors etc. is nonsense. The same team won the Champions Trophy but looked like a bunch of schoolboys here. We also had enough time to acclimatize. So What happened?

The better team will generally prevail barring exceptions (which the Champions Trophy was). What Pakistan showed in the ODI series is it true worth against a quality ODI team. What the did in the Champions Trophy against England India is not its true worth, because teams like India, England, South Africa and NZ would beat Pakistan in an ODI series anywhere in the world 8/10 times.

The whole point of a champions trophy and a world cup is to see how teams perform when the stakes are high and they are forced to play against the best of the world. If the game was all about law of averages or track records, then the trophy would be given to the number one ranked team and there would never be any tournaments or world cups.

Indeed, which is why the better team normally goes all the way. You have to go all the way back to the 1996 World Cup and the 2004 Champions Trophy to witness the last time an unlikely team won an ODI tournament. WT20s are different because in that format, the skill gap is often reduced because of the nature of the format. WI have won two WT20s, but when you add 180 deliveries, they cannot compete.
What we can "extrapolate" from this is that Pakistan, against all odds proved to the world that we have world class players that can rise up to the occasion. We can also extrapolate that these players are able to withstand the pressure of a tournament final against their arch rivals and outclass them in every department. This in no way proves that Pakistan is better than India, but it gives us a reason to be even more excited for the next inevitable pak-india encounter.

The only thing we can extrapolate from the Champions Trophy is that it was a fluke. The NZ ODI series showed that we cannot extrapolate anything more than that. The opinion that the Champions Trophy was not a fluke would have been worth some salt had we won or at least competed in the ODI series. However, the 5-0 thrashing has only reinforced my belief that the Champions Trophy was a massive one-off outcome, that will not happen again for any team in years and years.
As for the all-time great fascinating marvelous mamoon approved Indian batting order, its not the first time their batting order has succumbed to our bowling. The Asia cup 2016 clash might ring some bells. They weren't "bound" to fail for once, they were outclassed by some of the best bowling in the world. Each time the batsmen walks out to bat, it is a new game of chance. Saying that they were bound to fail means they cant maintain the consistency with which they play, not to mention bring their A game when required the most. If they cant do that, then they should never win a trophy ever again, since its all about performing when it matters in a tournament, not just winning bilaterals.

The Asia Cup 2016 does not ring any bells. It was a green pitch that was practically impossible to bat on. That match would have gone to the wire without Kohli. Every tom, dick and harry bowled lethal spells on that pitch.

The Indian lineup in the Champions Trophy was certainly bound to fail for once. They were in imperious form but their formidable top 3 had papered over the cracks of the aging middle-order. It happened in the final because of the scoreboard pressure. Any decent attack would have defended 339 in the final, the real credit for that win goes to the batsmen and to Kohli for allowing us to bat first.
 
Talking about all time lows was when Afridi led us during the world T20 with his below average performances.

Sarfaraz took over and we are the no 1 side in T20s plus thr first Asian team to win a series in NZ.

Afridi merited a place in the team, Sarfraz does not.

Note: if you are rubbish and your alternative is even more rubbish, it does not mean that you "merit" a place in the team.
 
Different times. This is a batting era and we need a batting superstar. He doesn’t have to be a great captain, but we need a world class batsman as our flagship player.


For me even a superstar all rounder or bowler is fine . As I said most great captains bowled at first class level.

The next captain needs to make the team on merit.
 
Afridi merited a place in the team, Sarfraz does not.

Note: if you are rubbish and your alternative is even more rubbish, it does not mean that you "merit" a place in the team.

LOL based on what did Afridi merit a place in the team?
He was a joke captain the asia cup prior to the wc should have been enough.

Under him we were rubbish in t20s.
Check the stats wise guy.
 
LOL based on what did Afridi merit a place in the team?
He was a joke captain the asia cup prior to the wc should have been enough.

Under him we were rubbish in t20s.
Check the stats wise guy.

Afridi in his prime was good enough for any T20 team. During 2009-2011, he was a genuinely good ODI player.

For most of his captaincy, he merited a place in the team. However, he should not have been made captain after Hafeez in 2014. He was too old to play and lead the side by that time.
 
Afridi in his prime was good enough for any T20 team. During 2009-2011, he was a genuinely good ODI player.

For most of his captaincy, he merited a place in the team. However, he should not have been made captain after Hafeez in 2014. He was too old to play and lead the side by that time.

And that right there was a HUGE mistake. He was a total disaster last 2.5 years.
 
The decline from Kardar/Imran/Wasim has been progressive. After Wasim, we had average personalities but they were pretty good players. Inzamam, MoYo, Misbah and even Afridi to an extent falls into that category.

Unfortunately, Sarfraz is a first or rather the second (after Misbah's protege): an average cricketer with an average personality.

No use of personality when you're not winning matches, or abandoning a test match after Daryl Hair's allegations.
Or putting men on the boundary lines when the opposition is 9 down.
I'd rather be a Mourinho and be hated, then be a Mr. Goody two shoes Wenger but not win anything.
 
The decline from Kardar/Imran/Wasim has been progressive. After Wasim, we had average personalities but they were pretty good players. Inzamam, MoYo, Misbah and even Afridi to an extent falls into that category.

Unfortunately, Sarfraz is a first or rather the second (after Misbah's protege): an average cricketer with an average personality.

I'd take tournament wins (even if they are "fluke" as you keep trying to tell us) over lack of personality, looks, english speaking skills, hair-style etc etc etc
 
The margin of win does not dictate whether an outcome was a fluke or not.


Let me explain how sports works: an inferior team will beat a superior team if the inferior team performs better on the day. However, if both the inferior and the superior team perform to the best of their capabilities, their is no possible chance of the inferior team winning simply because the skill-gap is huge.

Just because the "superior" team didn’t show up on the day doesn’t mean the "inferior" teams performance is a fluke and not a good win. What if the "inferior" team suppresses the "superior" team so much that they crumble and succumb? Could that be a possibility? No one stopped India from performing to their very best potential. The "skill-gap" isn't a quantitative figure. Many teams have skillful players yet they aren't able to get their teams over the line. Taking that skill and performing at the grandest stage of them all is what matters in these tournaments.


Pakistan defeated three superior sides in consecutive games which is an extremely rare event, but there were reasons for why it happened. It is simply not a case of Pakistan playing wonderful cricket. Yes they did, but there were certain things that went in Pakistan's favor which were beyond their control. For example, the rain in the South Africa game prevented a jittery finish; Perera's butterfingers saved a match that we had pretty much shelled; England were undone by a sluggish pitch and Kohli made a tactical error by bowling first in the final.

The only thing that might have definitely helped Pakistan in a profound way is the dropped catch by perera. Even before the rain we were well ahead of SA. England batted on the same pitch as we did, differentiating factor was that our bowling had much more variation than theirs. Kohli deciding to bat first means he had faith they could nullify our bowling attack in the second innings, which they clearly couldn’t and it proved too much for them. Getting Kohli out twice in 2 balls is enough evidence for the class of that spell. If things that weren't in Pakistan's control help them win the game, then nothing should be taken away from them. It’s a competitive sport, not a scientific experiment. You cant control all the variables and the outcome is affected by a lot of the things that happen because of plain luck. Just because Pakistan weren't the favorites to win doesn’t mean all their efforts should be undermined by the assumption that it was a "fluke". One's efforts should not be undermined if the competition can't keep up with them to begin with, no matter how much luck has a part to play in it.


All this talk of momentum etc. is a myth. Had we played England on a batting pitch in the SF, they would have shown us what momentum means. Had India batted in the Final and posted anything above 250, they would also have shown us what momentum means. We had "momentum" in the Mohali SF as well, having lost only one game and had obliterated WI in the QF.

What happened to our "momentum" in the NZ ODI series, the momentum that we gained by not-fluking the Champions and whitewashing SL? What happened to Australia's momentum of winning the Ashes 4-0? All this momentum means nothing. Surely with all the so-called momentum that we had gained over the last few months, we would have won at least two ODIs in NZ.

The excuse of having non-performing seniors etc. is nonsense. The same team won the Champions Trophy but looked like a bunch of schoolboys here. We also had enough time to acclimatize. So What happened?

The better team will generally prevail barring exceptions (which the Champions Trophy was). What Pakistan showed in the ODI series is it true worth against a quality ODI team. What the did in the Champions Trophy against England India is not its true worth, because teams like India, England, South Africa and NZ would beat Pakistan in an ODI series anywhere in the world 8/10 times.


Tournament favorites are generally decided based on who has the most momentum prior to the event. The reason we are having this conversation is because India has gained enough momentum over the years to be recognized as favorites in an Indo-Pak clash, and people are calling Pakistan's win a fluke since it wasn’t the expected outcome.

Too many "had" and "if" statements going around here. We played India in the finals on a batting pitch, and we won that game, so your proposed hypothetical England-Pak semifinal doesn’t apply since India easily rivals the English batting order. As for momentum in the NZ series , we clearly lost it during the first 3 odi games but it definitely started to come back in the remaining games, and peaked in the last 2 t20s.

Indeed, which is why the better team normally goes all the way. You have to go all the way back to the 1996 World Cup and the 2004 Champions Trophy to witness the last time an unlikely team won an ODI tournament. WT20s are different because in that format, the skill gap is often reduced because of the nature of the format. WI have won two WT20s, but when you add 180 deliveries, they cannot compete.

What metric do you use to rate teams as better or worse than each other? If destroying teams in home conditions only is the sole metric you use, then India is the best team on the planet. But as soon as they step out of India a big dark cloud of bad team selection, fragile batting and rifts within the team management hovers over the team.

I for one think that when teams play at a neutral venue like the champions trophy (barring the England team of course) and they are forced to play under knockout conditions when the pressure is on is a great way to gauge potential and skill-level of the teams. It shows how proactive the captains are, how deep the batting lineups are, and how well bowlers manage the final overs.



The only thing we can extrapolate from the Champions Trophy is that it was a fluke. The NZ ODI series showed that we cannot extrapolate anything more than that. The opinion that the Champions Trophy was not a fluke would have been worth some salt had we won or at least competed in the ODI series. However, the 5-0 thrashing has only reinforced my belief that the Champions Trophy was a massive one-off outcome, that will not happen again for any team in years and years.

Its been almost 7 months since Pakistan won the trophy. Any momentum they had gained there had been used up in the World11 and SL series and then the players went on to play franchise cricket, which I believe to be one of the reasons for the team to lose by this margin since the players must be exhausted by now. Not to mention the lack of preparation for this tour and the mere fact that it had been a while since all these players had played international cricket together in these conditions. Hopefully the PCB is better and stricter with scheduling tour games before the actual tours start in the future


The Asia Cup 2016 does not ring any bells. It was a green pitch that was practically impossible to bat on. That match would have gone to the wire without Kohli. Every tom, dick and harry bowled lethal spells on that pitch.

The Indian lineup in the Champions Trophy was certainly bound to fail for once. They were in imperious form but their formidable top 3 had papered over the cracks of the aging middle-order. It happened in the final because of the scoreboard pressure. Any decent attack would have defended 339 in the final, the real credit for that win goes to the batsmen and to Kohli for allowing us to bat first.

Just because you think that the Indian order was "bound to fail for once" doesn’t provide a logical basis for why you, or anyone else for that matter, think Pakistan's win was a fluke, nor does it justify losing a tournament final. If there batting order is unable to cope with the scoreboard pressure, then they don’t deserve winning, simple as that.

We had won matches by batting in the first and second innings. We chased 220 odd very comfortably against England under pressure conditions in the semi-final. Saying that Pakistan wouldn’t be able to chase and we should send Kohli our warm regards for letting us bat first isn't justified. They were undone by one of the best fast bowling spells of the past 2 years, the previous one also being Amir's spell in Asia cup 2016. That spell wasn’t because of any special conditions and neither did "every tom, dick and harry" from the opposition bowl such a spell like Amir's. It was the brilliance of one man that undid the Indians, not the universe's master plan to make their top order collapse at the wrong time.
 
Just because the "superior" team didn’t show up on the day doesn’t mean the "inferior" teams performance is a fluke and not a good win. What if the "inferior" team suppresses the "superior" team so much that they crumble and succumb? Could that be a possibility? No one stopped India from performing to their very best potential. The "skill-gap" isn't a quantitative figure. Many teams have skillful players yet they aren't able to get their teams over the line. Taking that skill and performing at the grandest stage of them all is what matters in these tournaments.




The only thing that might have definitely helped Pakistan in a profound way is the dropped catch by perera. Even before the rain we were well ahead of SA. England batted on the same pitch as we did, differentiating factor was that our bowling had much more variation than theirs. Kohli deciding to bat first means he had faith they could nullify our bowling attack in the second innings, which they clearly couldn’t and it proved too much for them. Getting Kohli out twice in 2 balls is enough evidence for the class of that spell. If things that weren't in Pakistan's control help them win the game, then nothing should be taken away from them. It’s a competitive sport, not a scientific experiment. You cant control all the variables and the outcome is affected by a lot of the things that happen because of plain luck. Just because Pakistan weren't the favorites to win doesn’t mean all their efforts should be undermined by the assumption that it was a "fluke". One's efforts should not be undermined if the competition can't keep up with them to begin with, no matter how much luck has a part to play in it.





Tournament favorites are generally decided based on who has the most momentum prior to the event. The reason we are having this conversation is because India has gained enough momentum over the years to be recognized as favorites in an Indo-Pak clash, and people are calling Pakistan's win a fluke since it wasn’t the expected outcome.

Too many "had" and "if" statements going around here. We played India in the finals on a batting pitch, and we won that game, so your proposed hypothetical England-Pak semifinal doesn’t apply since India easily rivals the English batting order. As for momentum in the NZ series , we clearly lost it during the first 3 odi games but it definitely started to come back in the remaining games, and peaked in the last 2 t20s.



What metric do you use to rate teams as better or worse than each other? If destroying teams in home conditions only is the sole metric you use, then India is the best team on the planet. But as soon as they step out of India a big dark cloud of bad team selection, fragile batting and rifts within the team management hovers over the team.

I for one think that when teams play at a neutral venue like the champions trophy (barring the England team of course) and they are forced to play under knockout conditions when the pressure is on is a great way to gauge potential and skill-level of the teams. It shows how proactive the captains are, how deep the batting lineups are, and how well bowlers manage the final overs.





Its been almost 7 months since Pakistan won the trophy. Any momentum they had gained there had been used up in the World11 and SL series and then the players went on to play franchise cricket, which I believe to be one of the reasons for the team to lose by this margin since the players must be exhausted by now. Not to mention the lack of preparation for this tour and the mere fact that it had been a while since all these players had played international cricket together in these conditions. Hopefully the PCB is better and stricter with scheduling tour games before the actual tours start in the future




Just because you think that the Indian order was "bound to fail for once" doesn’t provide a logical basis for why you, or anyone else for that matter, think Pakistan's win was a fluke, nor does it justify losing a tournament final. If there batting order is unable to cope with the scoreboard pressure, then they don’t deserve winning, simple as that.

We had won matches by batting in the first and second innings. We chased 220 odd very comfortably against England under pressure conditions in the semi-final. Saying that Pakistan wouldn’t be able to chase and we should send Kohli our warm regards for letting us bat first isn't justified. They were undone by one of the best fast bowling spells of the past 2 years, the previous one also being Amir's spell in Asia cup 2016. That spell wasn’t because of any special conditions and neither did "every tom, dick and harry" from the opposition bowl such a spell like Amir's. It was the brilliance of one man that undid the Indians, not the universe's master plan to make their top order collapse at the wrong time.

Wattayyy reply!
Respect bro.
 
Just because the "superior" team didn’t show up on the day doesn’t mean the "inferior" teams performance is a fluke and not a good win. What if the "inferior" team suppresses the "superior" team so much that they crumble and succumb? Could that be a possibility? No one stopped India from performing to their very best potential. The "skill-gap" isn't a quantitative figure. Many teams have skillful players yet they aren't able to get their teams over the line. Taking that skill and performing at the grandest stage of them all is what matters in these tournaments.




The only thing that might have definitely helped Pakistan in a profound way is the dropped catch by perera. Even before the rain we were well ahead of SA. England batted on the same pitch as we did, differentiating factor was that our bowling had much more variation than theirs. Kohli deciding to bat first means he had faith they could nullify our bowling attack in the second innings, which they clearly couldn’t and it proved too much for them. Getting Kohli out twice in 2 balls is enough evidence for the class of that spell. If things that weren't in Pakistan's control help them win the game, then nothing should be taken away from them. It’s a competitive sport, not a scientific experiment. You cant control all the variables and the outcome is affected by a lot of the things that happen because of plain luck. Just because Pakistan weren't the favorites to win doesn’t mean all their efforts should be undermined by the assumption that it was a "fluke". One's efforts should not be undermined if the competition can't keep up with them to begin with, no matter how much luck has a part to play in it.





Tournament favorites are generally decided based on who has the most momentum prior to the event. The reason we are having this conversation is because India has gained enough momentum over the years to be recognized as favorites in an Indo-Pak clash, and people are calling Pakistan's win a fluke since it wasn’t the expected outcome.

Too many "had" and "if" statements going around here. We played India in the finals on a batting pitch, and we won that game, so your proposed hypothetical England-Pak semifinal doesn’t apply since India easily rivals the English batting order. As for momentum in the NZ series , we clearly lost it during the first 3 odi games but it definitely started to come back in the remaining games, and peaked in the last 2 t20s.



What metric do you use to rate teams as better or worse than each other? If destroying teams in home conditions only is the sole metric you use, then India is the best team on the planet. But as soon as they step out of India a big dark cloud of bad team selection, fragile batting and rifts within the team management hovers over the team.

I for one think that when teams play at a neutral venue like the champions trophy (barring the England team of course) and they are forced to play under knockout conditions when the pressure is on is a great way to gauge potential and skill-level of the teams. It shows how proactive the captains are, how deep the batting lineups are, and how well bowlers manage the final overs.





Its been almost 7 months since Pakistan won the trophy. Any momentum they had gained there had been used up in the World11 and SL series and then the players went on to play franchise cricket, which I believe to be one of the reasons for the team to lose by this margin since the players must be exhausted by now. Not to mention the lack of preparation for this tour and the mere fact that it had been a while since all these players had played international cricket together in these conditions. Hopefully the PCB is better and stricter with scheduling tour games before the actual tours start in the future




Just because you think that the Indian order was "bound to fail for once" doesn’t provide a logical basis for why you, or anyone else for that matter, think Pakistan's win was a fluke, nor does it justify losing a tournament final. If there batting order is unable to cope with the scoreboard pressure, then they don’t deserve winning, simple as that.

We had won matches by batting in the first and second innings. We chased 220 odd very comfortably against England under pressure conditions in the semi-final. Saying that Pakistan wouldn’t be able to chase and we should send Kohli our warm regards for letting us bat first isn't justified. They were undone by one of the best fast bowling spells of the past 2 years, the previous one also being Amir's spell in Asia cup 2016. That spell wasn’t because of any special conditions and neither did "every tom, dick and harry" from the opposition bowl such a spell like Amir's. It was the brilliance of one man that undid the Indians, not the universe's master plan to make their top order collapse at the wrong time.

Will never forget this post. Or that name. Class act all the way.
 
Just because the "superior" team didn’t show up on the day doesn’t mean the "inferior" teams performance is a fluke and not a good win. What if the "inferior" team suppresses the "superior" team so much that they crumble and succumb? Could that be a possibility? No one stopped India from performing to their very best potential. The "skill-gap" isn't a quantitative figure. Many teams have skillful players yet they aren't able to get their teams over the line. Taking that skill and performing at the grandest stage of them all is what matters in these tournaments.




The only thing that might have definitely helped Pakistan in a profound way is the dropped catch by perera. Even before the rain we were well ahead of SA. England batted on the same pitch as we did, differentiating factor was that our bowling had much more variation than theirs. Kohli deciding to bat first means he had faith they could nullify our bowling attack in the second innings, which they clearly couldn’t and it proved too much for them. Getting Kohli out twice in 2 balls is enough evidence for the class of that spell. If things that weren't in Pakistan's control help them win the game, then nothing should be taken away from them. It’s a competitive sport, not a scientific experiment. You cant control all the variables and the outcome is affected by a lot of the things that happen because of plain luck. Just because Pakistan weren't the favorites to win doesn’t mean all their efforts should be undermined by the assumption that it was a "fluke". One's efforts should not be undermined if the competition can't keep up with them to begin with, no matter how much luck has a part to play in it.





Tournament favorites are generally decided based on who has the most momentum prior to the event. The reason we are having this conversation is because India has gained enough momentum over the years to be recognized as favorites in an Indo-Pak clash, and people are calling Pakistan's win a fluke since it wasn’t the expected outcome.

Too many "had" and "if" statements going around here. We played India in the finals on a batting pitch, and we won that game, so your proposed hypothetical England-Pak semifinal doesn’t apply since India easily rivals the English batting order. As for momentum in the NZ series , we clearly lost it during the first 3 odi games but it definitely started to come back in the remaining games, and peaked in the last 2 t20s.



What metric do you use to rate teams as better or worse than each other? If destroying teams in home conditions only is the sole metric you use, then India is the best team on the planet. But as soon as they step out of India a big dark cloud of bad team selection, fragile batting and rifts within the team management hovers over the team.

I for one think that when teams play at a neutral venue like the champions trophy (barring the England team of course) and they are forced to play under knockout conditions when the pressure is on is a great way to gauge potential and skill-level of the teams. It shows how proactive the captains are, how deep the batting lineups are, and how well bowlers manage the final overs.





Its been almost 7 months since Pakistan won the trophy. Any momentum they had gained there had been used up in the World11 and SL series and then the players went on to play franchise cricket, which I believe to be one of the reasons for the team to lose by this margin since the players must be exhausted by now. Not to mention the lack of preparation for this tour and the mere fact that it had been a while since all these players had played international cricket together in these conditions. Hopefully the PCB is better and stricter with scheduling tour games before the actual tours start in the future




Just because you think that the Indian order was "bound to fail for once" doesn’t provide a logical basis for why you, or anyone else for that matter, think Pakistan's win was a fluke, nor does it justify losing a tournament final. If there batting order is unable to cope with the scoreboard pressure, then they don’t deserve winning, simple as that.

We had won matches by batting in the first and second innings. We chased 220 odd very comfortably against England under pressure conditions in the semi-final. Saying that Pakistan wouldn’t be able to chase and we should send Kohli our warm regards for letting us bat first isn't justified. They were undone by one of the best fast bowling spells of the past 2 years, the previous one also being Amir's spell in Asia cup 2016. That spell wasn’t because of any special conditions and neither did "every tom, dick and harry" from the opposition bowl such a spell like Amir's. It was the brilliance of one man that undid the Indians, not the universe's master plan to make their top order collapse at the wrong time.

Wow you assassinated him :)))
 
just because the "superior" team didn’t show up on the day doesn’t mean the "inferior" teams performance is a fluke and not a good win. What if the "inferior" team suppresses the "superior" team so much that they crumble and succumb? Could that be a possibility? No one stopped india from performing to their very best potential. The "skill-gap" isn't a quantitative figure. Many teams have skillful players yet they aren't able to get their teams over the line. Taking that skill and performing at the grandest stage of them all is what matters in these tournaments.




The only thing that might have definitely helped pakistan in a profound way is the dropped catch by perera. Even before the rain we were well ahead of sa. England batted on the same pitch as we did, differentiating factor was that our bowling had much more variation than theirs. Kohli deciding to bat first means he had faith they could nullify our bowling attack in the second innings, which they clearly couldn’t and it proved too much for them. Getting kohli out twice in 2 balls is enough evidence for the class of that spell. If things that weren't in pakistan's control help them win the game, then nothing should be taken away from them. It’s a competitive sport, not a scientific experiment. You cant control all the variables and the outcome is affected by a lot of the things that happen because of plain luck. Just because pakistan weren't the favorites to win doesn’t mean all their efforts should be undermined by the assumption that it was a "fluke". One's efforts should not be undermined if the competition can't keep up with them to begin with, no matter how much luck has a part to play in it.





Tournament favorites are generally decided based on who has the most momentum prior to the event. The reason we are having this conversation is because india has gained enough momentum over the years to be recognized as favorites in an indo-pak clash, and people are calling pakistan's win a fluke since it wasn’t the expected outcome.

Too many "had" and "if" statements going around here. We played india in the finals on a batting pitch, and we won that game, so your proposed hypothetical england-pak semifinal doesn’t apply since india easily rivals the english batting order. As for momentum in the nz series , we clearly lost it during the first 3 odi games but it definitely started to come back in the remaining games, and peaked in the last 2 t20s.



What metric do you use to rate teams as better or worse than each other? If destroying teams in home conditions only is the sole metric you use, then india is the best team on the planet. But as soon as they step out of india a big dark cloud of bad team selection, fragile batting and rifts within the team management hovers over the team.

I for one think that when teams play at a neutral venue like the champions trophy (barring the england team of course) and they are forced to play under knockout conditions when the pressure is on is a great way to gauge potential and skill-level of the teams. It shows how proactive the captains are, how deep the batting lineups are, and how well bowlers manage the final overs.





Its been almost 7 months since pakistan won the trophy. Any momentum they had gained there had been used up in the world11 and sl series and then the players went on to play franchise cricket, which i believe to be one of the reasons for the team to lose by this margin since the players must be exhausted by now. Not to mention the lack of preparation for this tour and the mere fact that it had been a while since all these players had played international cricket together in these conditions. Hopefully the pcb is better and stricter with scheduling tour games before the actual tours start in the future




just because you think that the indian order was "bound to fail for once" doesn’t provide a logical basis for why you, or anyone else for that matter, think pakistan's win was a fluke, nor does it justify losing a tournament final. If there batting order is unable to cope with the scoreboard pressure, then they don’t deserve winning, simple as that.

We had won matches by batting in the first and second innings. We chased 220 odd very comfortably against england under pressure conditions in the semi-final. Saying that pakistan wouldn’t be able to chase and we should send kohli our warm regards for letting us bat first isn't justified. They were undone by one of the best fast bowling spells of the past 2 years, the previous one also being amir's spell in asia cup 2016. That spell wasn’t because of any special conditions and neither did "every tom, dick and harry" from the opposition bowl such a spell like amir's. It was the brilliance of one man that undid the indians, not the universe's master plan to make their top order collapse at the wrong time.

potw
 
Just because the "superior" team didn’t show up on the day doesn’t mean the "inferior" teams performance is a fluke and not a good win. What if the "inferior" team suppresses the "superior" team so much that they crumble and succumb? Could that be a possibility? No one stopped India from performing to their very best potential. The "skill-gap" isn't a quantitative figure. Many teams have skillful players yet they aren't able to get their teams over the line. Taking that skill and performing at the grandest stage of them all is what matters in these tournaments.

The skills gap is a quantitative figure, especially when the skill gap is so significant. There is daylight between the current Pakistani and Indian ODI teams, and that gap will be highlighted if these two teams play let's say 10 matches with each other on the trot anywhere in the world in any conditions. India will prevail at least 7/10 times.

Again, you are missing the point or perhaps you are deliberately trying to avoid it. Did Pakistan play better than India on the day? Of course they did. However, it was clearly a one-off situation. We cannot extrapolate anything from that performance and make tall claims about the future because it will backfire, and that is what happened in the NZ series.

Pakistan were better than India on that day but a lot of things went our way as well. Fakhar getting dismissed on a no ball, those inside edges that barely missed the stumps, the numerous run out chances that we presented India early on etc. If Fakhar would have been dismissed early on, the likes of Babar and Hafeez would not have cashed in on the momentum he created.

Secondly, Azhar's runout was very timely as well. He got out at the perfect time for Pakistan because he would have been a liability in the last 15-20 overs. Pretty everything that could have gone right for Pakistan on that day did.

You can call it a fluke or a one-off event or whatever. The fact is that was nothing short of a miracle. We should definitely give credit to the Pakistan team, but we should also respect the external factors that played a significant role in our win.

The only thing that might have definitely helped Pakistan in a profound way is the dropped catch by perera. Even before the rain we were well ahead of SA. England batted on the same pitch as we did, differentiating factor was that our bowling had much more variation than theirs. Kohli deciding to bat first means he had faith they could nullify our bowling attack in the second innings, which they clearly couldn’t and it proved too much for them. Getting Kohli out twice in 2 balls is enough evidence for the class of that spell. If things that weren't in Pakistan's control help them win the game, then nothing should be taken away from them. It’s a competitive sport, not a scientific experiment. You cant control all the variables and the outcome is affected by a lot of the things that happen because of plain luck. Just because Pakistan weren't the favorites to win doesn’t mean all their efforts should be undermined by the assumption that it was a "fluke". One's efforts should not be undermined if the competition can't keep up with them to begin with, no matter how much luck has a part to play in it.

We were heading for a nervous finish against South Africa. We were in a rut and scoring runs was looking difficult. Malik looked good but we know his caliber against quality pace attacks. Without the rain, Pakistan would have probably limped across the finish line, but the rain certainly proved to be a 'get out of jail' moment for us.

As for as the SF is concerned, the sluggish pitch suited our batsmen more than the free flowing English batsmen. They were clearly not prepared for such a surface and it played into our hands. Bowling first also benefited us because we saw how the pitched played out before we came to bat, and it was an ideal one for the likes of Azhar etc.

On the type of wickets that were the norm in that tournament, there is no way England would have lost to us in spite of all the so-called momentum. The final has been discussed to death already, so I don't know what to elaborate on without repeating myself.

The bottom line is that Pakistan played well in the Champions Trophy, but everything fell in the right place as well. Hence, to extrapolate anything from that tournament would be delusional.

It was the same delusional that fooled people into thinking that we will win the ODI series in NZ before they got a massive reality check. However, I do admire the passion and patriotism of people who continue to prove that the Champions Trophy was not an aberration and not a flash in the pan in spite of the massive reality check that they got.


Tournament favorites are generally decided based on who has the most momentum prior to the event.

No. Only in Pakistan do people use these buzzwords like momentum, mercuriality, unpredictability and other such nonsense to hide the deficiencies and weaknesses of the team. Tournament favorites are decided on who the best teams are for certain conditions.

Australia winning the 2015 World Cup was not about momentum; India winning the 2011 World Cup was not about momentum; Australia winning the 2003 and 2007 World Cup was not about momentum; Germany winning the 2014 World Cup and Spain winning the 2010 World Cup was not about momentum.

The reason we are having this conversation is because India has gained enough momentum over the years to be recognized as favorites in an Indo-Pak clash, and people are calling Pakistan's win a fluke since it wasn’t the expected outcome.

India have not gained momentum; they have been a world class unit for nearly two decades now and have left Pakistan cricket in its dust. Leave this momentum rubbish to Pakistan only please.

India improved their domestic system and their overall cricketing culture, and it has paid dividends. Their success is long-term and not because of some so-called momentum.
Too many "had" and "if" statements going around here. We played India in the finals on a batting pitch, and we won that game, so your proposed hypothetical England-Pak semifinal doesn’t apply since India easily rivals the English batting order. As for momentum in the NZ series , we clearly lost it during the first 3 odi games but it definitely started to come back in the remaining games, and peaked in the last 2 t20s.

A mediocre team cannot beat a superior team without certain ifs and buts coming into play. Secondly, only in Pakistan do you gain "momentum" after getting thrashed in the first three ODIs.

The last two ODIs and the two T20s was not about momentum. It is normal for a team to lose a bit of intensity after beating the opposition, and NZ will not play to their maximum potential every game. As far as the T20s are concerned, NZ is not a top T20 side because they are over-reliant on their openers, and one of whom did not play in the decider.

Pakistan have a better chance of beating NZ in T20s than ODIs. It has nothing to do with momentum.
What metric do you use to rate teams as better or worse than each other? If destroying teams in home conditions only is the sole metric you use, then India is the best team on the planet. But as soon as they step out of India a big dark cloud of bad team selection, fragile batting and rifts within the team management hovers over the team.

India have a superior batting unit and their bowling attack is better as well. That is the metric I am using. They lost in South Africa but they competed well. Pitch Pakistan against South Africa in the same conditions and we will be mauled and get dismissed for less than hundred on multiple occasions.

You don't need to focus on any 'metric' to prove that India is far ahead of Pakistan across all formats at the moment, and that is not going to change in the future as well when you look at the spanking that our U-19 got earlier today.
I for one think that when teams play at a neutral venue like the champions trophy (barring the England team of course) and they are forced to play under knockout conditions when the pressure is on is a great way to gauge potential and skill-level of the teams. It shows how proactive the captains are, how deep the batting lineups are, and how well bowlers manage the final overs.

Yes because Pakistan have been winning tournaments all the time. This is its first ODI trophy in 25 years. India on the other hand have done very well in tournaments. Home or not, they have handled the pressure of tournaments better than us, which is they have more World Cups and more Champions Trophies to their name.

Secondly, home advantage is often negated in tournaments. Only two World Cups in history have been won by the home team, and if we play a World Cup in Pakistan/UAE tomorrow, do you think we will win? Absolutely not.

We have been renowned chokers for a number of years now and the Champions Trophy was a one-off event. However, I am happy to revisit my opinion if the same team throws its weight around in the World Cup in the same venue next year. That will prove that we can extrapolate something from the Champions Trophy.

Its been almost 7 months since Pakistan won the trophy. Any momentum they had gained there had been used up in the World11 and SL series and then the players went on to play franchise cricket, which I believe to be one of the reasons for the team to lose by this margin since the players must be exhausted by now. Not to mention the lack of preparation for this tour and the mere fact that it had been a while since all these players had played international cricket together in these conditions. Hopefully the PCB is better and stricter with scheduling tour games before the actual tours start in the future

:))

Your post lost credibility with this statement.

"we had momentum but it got lost because of the x number of months etc." With all due respect, this was embarrassing to read.

Can you please specify the month in which we lost our "momentum"? Can you please tell us the dates on which we would have beaten NZ because we still had our "momentum"?

July, August, September, October, November, December? Because it appears that the "momentum" had fizzled out completely by January.

Yes the players looked complacent and unprepared, but it has played a massive part in the mediocrity and unprofessionalism of Pakistan cricket and it will not change in the future. We have talked about it for the last 10 years and will continue to talk about it for the next 10 years. Nothing is going to happen.
Just because you think that the Indian order was "bound to fail for once" doesn’t provide a logical basis for why you, or anyone else for that matter, think Pakistan's win was a fluke, nor does it justify losing a tournament final. If there batting order is unable to cope with the scoreboard pressure, then they don’t deserve winning, simple as that.

India's batting is more than capable of dealing with scoreboard pressure. They are the best chasers in the game and have proved it under pressure many times. They did it in front of the expectations of the Indian crowd in the 2011 final when there was pin drop silence because Tendulkar had gone cheaply.

Yes different times but the psyche of Indian cricket has not changed. They are the only team in the world that can chase 339 in the final, and Kohli is the only batsman in the world who can pull it off. However, it didn't happen for them on that day. Pakistan deserve credit for it but it also was an off-day for them. This is cricket, these things happen. This was not much different to India restricting WI and Viv Richards in the 1983 final.
We had won matches by batting in the first and second innings. We chased 220 odd very comfortably against England under pressure conditions in the semi-final. Saying that Pakistan wouldn’t be able to chase and we should send Kohli our warm regards for letting us bat first isn't justified. They were undone by one of the best fast bowling spells of the past 2 years, the previous one also being Amir's spell in Asia cup 2016. That spell wasn’t because of any special conditions and neither did "every tom, dick and harry" from the opposition bowl such a spell like Amir's. It was the brilliance of one man that undid the Indians, not the universe's master plan to make their top order collapse at the wrong time.

It is justified because we crap our pants when it comes to chasing totals. We made a mess of the SL chase in spite of having the "momentum" of the SA win, and the SA chase itself was aided by run.

We chased the runs in the SF comfortably because the pitch suited our batsmen who were able to trot at their pace against an English that was clearly demoralized by the way things had panned out in the first innings. Their shoulders had dropped and there was no intensity in their game. They had pretty much accepted their fate after the first innings.

Amir's Asia Cup spell wasn't about special conditions? Seriously?

The pitch resembled the Wimbledon Centre Court and 120 was a match-winning total. It was a dream pitch for a seamer and not only Amir but all bowlers (minus the hack Wahab) took advantage of it. The match would have gone to the wire but Kohli was the only batsman who had the caliber to tackle the conditions. The reason why Amir's got more hype than that of Sami, Pandya or Bumrah because it came in the first over and he dismissed better quality batsmen than the other bowlers.

However, to claim that the conditions did not favor Amir and the other bowlers is the most ridiculous thing I have read today ahead of the statement that Pakistan lost momentum because it played NZ after x number of months, and that we gained momentum after getting thrashed in the first three ODIs.
 
Wattayyy reply!
Respect bro.

Will never forget this post. Or that name. Class act all the way.

Wow you assassinated him :)))


What stood out for me from his post was the following:

1) Pakistan lost momentum because they played NZ 7 months after winning the Champions Trophy. I am keen to know the number of months it took for Pakistan to lose the Champions Trophy momentum.

In addition, I also want to know the month in which we would have beaten NZ with our momentum. July, September, November?

2) Pakistan is the only team in the world that can gain momentum midway a series after losing the first three ODIs.

3) Amir's Asia Cup spell in 2016 had nothing to do with the green pitch. Pandya must be an ATG bowler for taking 3 wickets for 8 runs on that flat wicket, and Bumrah must be as economical as Curtly Ambrose for conceding only 8 runs in 4 overs on that flat wicket.

[MENTION=146253]AssassinatedDevil[/MENTION]

Sorry I forgot to congratulate you for the POTW. Well done, the first one is always hard to get.

It is like a bottle of ketchup. It doesn't flow, but when it does, it is hard to stop. Looking forward to more POTWs from you.
 
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The fact that there are excuses being made for the performances of South Africa, England and India is quite silly. This 'would've, could've, should've' stuff is normally applicable to minnows. If you're finding excuses for their performance on that day, rather than accepting the fact that Pakistan comprehensively outplayed them, you are arguing just for the sake of arguing. In which case I believe most of the posters are wasting their time here.
 
This should be fun


The skills gap is a quantitative figure, especially when the skill gap is so significant. There is daylight between the current Pakistani and Indian ODI teams, and that gap will be highlighted if these two teams play let's say 10 matches with each other on the trot anywhere in the world in any conditions. India will prevail at least 7/10 times.
It's really not a quantitative figure. I don’t see any meaningful numbers presented by you. All I see is a bunch of probability chances that you conjured up yourself that many armchair experts are used to doing. You can float all the fractions you want but at the end of the day, performance on the day is what matters, not your past records in world tournaments against your opposition. Both teams were in red hot form as they approached the final, and the better team won on the day just because we outclassed them in every facet of the game. I'm not saying that Pakistan would win your proposed 10 match series, but coming up with random percentages doesn’t give your argument any strength.

Again, you are missing the point or perhaps you are deliberately trying to avoid it. Did Pakistan play better than India on the day? Of course they did. However, it was clearly a one-off situation. We cannot extrapolate anything from that performance and make tall claims about the future because it will backfire, and that is what happened in the NZ series. The bottom line is that Pakistan played well in the Champions Trophy, but everything fell in the right place as well. Hence, to extrapolate anything from that tournament would be delusional.

This is what bugs me the most. If you can't extrapolate that we have found a central nucleus of great match winning players such as Fakhar Zaman, Babar Azam, Shadab Khan and Hassan Ali because of their performances in the recent past including the champions trophy, then I'm probably just wasting my time typing up all of this. Winning the champions trophy final against their arch-rivals when a lot of them were playing their first icc tournament goes to show how much potential these young players have. The coaching staff also deserves credit for all their efforts. You can't have an outcome and not extrapolate any findings at all. No one is saying this team is the best LOI team in history but the other ends of the spectrum that you seem to be occupying is way too harsh on this team. Btw, what you're doing is extrapolating that this team has made no improvements by winning the CT, by which you are contradicting yourself entirely.

Pakistan were better than India on that day but a lot of things went our way as well. Fakhar getting dismissed on a no ball, those inside edges that barely missed the stumps, the numerous run out chances that we presented India early on etc. If Fakhar would have been dismissed early on, the likes of Babar and Hafeez would not have cashed in on the momentum he created.

Its not Fakhar's fault bumrah bowled a no-ball. Similarly, Kohli could've cashed in on Azhar's drop off of Amir's bowling, but he didn't and got caught next ball. He wasn’t able to seize the window of opportunity, so its his own fault. He gets edging at that same 4th/5th stump line and I assume the pakistani camp made plans to bowl in that line to kohli, which worked out splendidly.



We were heading for a nervous finish against South Africa. We were in a rut and scoring runs was looking difficult. Malik looked good but we know his caliber against quality pace attacks. Without the rain, Pakistan would have probably limped across the finish line, but the rain certainly proved to be a 'get out of jail' moment for us.
On the type of wickets that were the norm in that tournament, there is no way England would have lost to us in spite of all the so-called momentum. The final has been discussed to death already, so I don't know what to elaborate on without repeating myself.

Once again, too many alternate realities going on here. You must be a fan of the multiverse theory. Too many "would" statements. I'll chime in myself. Had the rain not arrived, Malik could've even gone on to score a half century, or Babar could've gone for a century, humiliating SA even more. These butterfly effect scenarios you propose don’t seem to work in the real world. What's done is done.


As for as the SF is concerned, the sluggish pitch suited our batsmen more than the free flowing English batsmen. They were clearly not prepared for such a surface and it played into our hands. Bowling first also benefited us because we saw how the pitched played out before we came to bat, and it was an ideal one for the likes of Azhar etc.

How convenient. The English couldn’t cope with our pace attack so let's blame it on their lack of preparation despite playing in their home ground. If their "free-flowing" batsman can't cope on a wicket in which Pakistan made 215 runs in 38 overs then maybe they should resign from the team effective immediately. If the pitch was good enough for Pakistan to score on so quickly, then England's "free-flowing" lineup could've overcome any of the "sluggish" problems of the pitch and piled on more runs. The Pakistani bowling however didn’t seem to comply with the Englishmen's demands.


It was the same delusional that fooled people into thinking that we will win the ODI series in NZ before they got a massive reality check. However, I do admire the passion and patriotism of people who continue to prove that the Champions Trophy was not an aberration and not a flash in the pan in spite of the massive reality check that they got.

Getting a reality check is better than consoling yourself through wishful thinking that you seem to be doing by using "could" and "would" scenarios.


No. Only in Pakistan do people use these buzzwords like momentum, mercuriality, unpredictability and other such nonsense to hide the deficiencies and weaknesses of the team. Tournament favorites are decided on who the best teams are for certain conditions.

Okay…so…best teams for certain conditions? How do people decide that? Is there some holy grail which spells out what teams are best for certain conditions? England were touted as tournament favorites because they were in red-hot form not only at home, but during away tours as well.
If a team is performing better than other teams in the period before the tournament begins, then they are more likely to be considered favorites over other teams. I didn’t think I would have to type so much just to explain how tournament favorites work in sports.

The whole betting and match-fixing mafias operate based on what teams and players are likely to do well. They approach the teams which have players that are performing the best at that point in time.

Words like mercuriality and unpredictability aren't used to hide our deficiencies. Rather, they force us to think why our teams aren't just predictably good rather than being good in patches, but then again, that’s just my perspective. It also plays into Pakistan's advantage sometimes, where the opposition can often be caught off guard as to how they pull off certain feats during the matches, further putting pressure on the opposition.


A mediocre team cannot beat a superior team without certain ifs and buts coming into play. Secondly, only in Pakistan do you gain "momentum" after getting thrashed in the first three ODIs.

The last two ODIs and the two T20s was not about momentum. It is normal for a team to lose a bit of intensity after beating the opposition, and NZ will not play to their maximum potential every game. As far as the T20s are concerned, NZ is not a top T20 side because they are over-reliant on their openers, and one of whom did not play in the decider.

Getting thrashed in matches is what often inspires you to find ways to get on top of the opposition. If you look try hard enough, then you find ways to get on top of the opposition. Rinse and repeat this process effectively, and you end up with momentum.


I could make similar arguments for Pakistan losing the ODI series.
"It is normal for a team to lose their first big ODI series in challenging conditions after winning a world tournament. They just lost intensity"
Is that a good excuse for losing any series irrespective of the format? I'll let you decide.

They aren't a top t20 side because it makes it easier to convey your points in your argument. Right?
We didn’t have Imad who was our number one ranked t20 bowler. If we can make do without our best t20 bowler away from home, then they should be able to make-do without their best t20 batsman in home conditions after winning the ODIs 5-0.


India have a superior batting unit and their bowling attack is better as well. That is the metric I am using. They lost in South Africa but they competed well. Pitch Pakistan against South Africa in the same conditions and we will be mauled and get dismissed for less than hundred on multiple occasions.

Subjective metrics like that are laughable to say the least.

Again a hypothetical scenario. Only time will tell how pakistan performs in SA later this year. India couldnt draw against England in 2014 and we played a highly competitive series in 2016, so best to reserve judgement for now.



:))

Your post lost credibility with this statement.

"we had momentum but it got lost because of the x number of months etc." With all due respect, this was embarrassing to read.

Can you please specify the month in which we lost our "momentum"? Can you please tell us the dates on which we would have beaten NZ because we still had our "momentum"?

July, August, September, October, November, December? Because it appears that the "momentum" had fizzled out completely by January.

Yes the players looked complacent and unprepared, but it has played a massive part in the mediocrity and unprofessionalism of Pakistan cricket and it will not change in the future. We have talked about it for the last 10 years and will continue to talk about it for the next 10 years. Nothing is going to happen.
Let me reiterate my point so it doesn’t fly over your head and rather hits you on the helmet.

If we had played this series right after the champions trophy, when all of our players like imad and junaid were available and the team had a settled playing 11, they would've performed much better. We would've been coming off back to back wins, so the team must be more confident. For all we know the outcome could've been the same for the ODI series, but coming off a tournament win is the confidence players need to perform at their best. You don’t seem to understand what momentum is in sport.

It comes back to how players perform on the day, not the way they played 5 years ago. If the team gels well with a couple of wins under their belt, it is often enough to beat the best sides in the world.


India's batting is more than capable of dealing with scoreboard pressure. They are the best chasers in the game and have proved it under pressure many times. They did it in front of the expectations of the Indian crowd in the 2011 final when there was pin drop silence because Tendulkar had gone cheaply.

Yes different times but the psyche of Indian cricket has not changed. They are the only team in the world that can chase 339 in the final, and Kohli is the only batsman in the world who can pull it off. However, it didn't happen for them on that day. Pakistan deserve credit for it but it also was an off-day for them. This is cricket, these things happen. This was not much different to India restricting WI and Viv Richards in the 1983 final.

India is without a doubt a really high profile batting lineup but the past 2 ODI tournaments have clearly showed they aren't as good as you think they are. You are focusing on their good knockout performances so I'll remind you of a very recent bad one. The 2015 world cup against Australia showed just how pathetic India can be when the stakes are high. Losing by 95 runs in a world cup semi-final doesn’t look pretty no matter how you twist it. It doesn’t mean they are a bad team, but the opposition outclassed them in more ways than one.




We chased the runs in the SF comfortably because the pitch suited our batsmen who were able to trot at their pace against an English that was clearly demoralized by the way things had panned out in the first innings. Their shoulders had dropped and there was no intensity in their game. They had pretty much accepted their fate after the first innings.
Do the players who demoralized the English side in the first innings not play for Pakistan? It’s the batsmen's job to capitalize on the efforts of the bowlers, and that’s what they precisely did by chasing the total in the SF so easily. If the English team got demoralized so easily, then nothing the Pakistani players can do except blow them away. We went to play cricket, not babysit them and make sure their shoulders were upright.

Amir's Asia Cup spell wasn't about special conditions? Seriously?

The pitch resembled the Wimbledon Centre Court and 120 was a match-winning total. It was a dream pitch for a seamer and not only Amir but all bowlers (minus the hack Wahab) took advantage of it. The match would have gone to the wire but Kohli was the only batsman who had the caliber to tackle the conditions. The reason why Amir's got more hype than that of Sami, Pandya or Bumrah because it came in the first over and he dismissed better quality batsmen than the other bowlers.

However, to claim that the conditions did not favor Amir and the other bowlers is the most ridiculous thing I have read today ahead of the statement that Pakistan lost momentum because it played NZ after x number of months, and that we gained momentum after getting thrashed in the first three ODIs.
When I said "that spell wasn’t because of any special conditions and neither did "every tom, dick and harry" from the opposition bowl such a spell like Amir's. " I was talking about the Champions trophy spell and not the Asia cup spell. Nevertheless, my apologies since I see how you misinterpreted my point because of my vague language.

The CT spell was undoubtedly the best fast bowling spell by a Pakistani since the 2015 WC Wahab spell, and perhaps the single best fast bowling spell of 2017. You could ramble all you want about how the universe wanted the Indian batting order to fail but nothing beats the Goosebumps I still get when I recall that spell by the magician Amir.

While on the subject of the Asia cup spell, the pitch definitely aided the bowlers but it was the manner in which Amir got the top order out which was sublime. Causing a collapse by getting wickets of rahane, rohit and raina is what set him apart. If you are going to draw parallels between Amir and the Indians bowlers because they also got wickets , then do remember Pandya got malik, amir and sami out. And if you think that these 3 pak batsmen are anywhere near as good as Amir's 3 wickets, then that’s delusion to the nth degree.

In short, stop spitting over this teams past performances just because they had a bad tour in the present. In these days Pakistan's cricket team is one of the most prestigious things about our country in

I believe that you are entitled to your own opinion, but there is enough negativity in the world already. We don’t need people to add onto it by arguing just for the sake of arguing.
 
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Sorry I forgot to congratulate you for the POTW. Well done, the first one is always hard to get.

It is like a bottle of ketchup. It doesn't flow, but when it does, it is hard to stop. Looking forward to more POTWs from you.

Thanks Alot. I appreciate it. Kudos to you for typing up such long posts.:ashwin
 
Thanks Alot. I appreciate it. Kudos to you for typing up such long posts.:ashwin

I agree with your statement that we are entitled to our opinions and there is no point in arguing for the sake of arguing, but unfortunately I am still looking for some clarifications as far as the momentum is concerned.

You stated that if the NZ series would have been played "right after" the Champions Trophy, we would have done well.

What does "right after" mean?

Two days, three days, one week, two weeks, three weeks?

Is there any scale or a formula that tells us how long Pakistan's momentum lasts?

It seems like an excuse to me. If the NZ series would have been held a week after the Champions Trophy and we would have lost, the excuse would be that oh we lost the momentum over the last few days.

If it would have been held the day after the Champions Trophy and we would have lost, the excuse would be that oh the momentum was lost in our celebrations.

There is a good reason why only in Pakistan do people talk about momentum etc., and the reason is that it doesn't mean anything.

All this momentum, cornered tigers, mercuriality, unpredictability crap is nothing but a pretext to take attention away from our inconsistency. We are inconsistent because we are mediocre, and we are mediocre due to multiple reasons that have been discussed to death.

As a result of our inconsistent cricket but consistent mediocrity, we lose to the top teams more often than not. Beating SA, England and India in successive knockout games doesn't change anything.
 
I agree with your statement that we are entitled to our opinions and there is no point in arguing for the sake of arguing, but unfortunately I am still looking for some clarifications as far as the momentum is concerned.

You stated that if the NZ series would have been played "right after" the Champions Trophy, we would have done well.

What does "right after" mean?

Two days, three days, one week, two weeks, three weeks?

Is there any scale or a formula that tells us how long Pakistan's momentum lasts?

It seems like an excuse to me. If the NZ series would have been held a week after the Champions Trophy and we would have lost, the excuse would be that oh we lost the momentum over the last few days.

If it would have been held the day after the Champions Trophy and we would have lost, the excuse would be that oh the momentum was lost in our celebrations.

There is a good reason why only in Pakistan do people talk about momentum etc., and the reason is that it doesn't mean anything.

All this momentum, cornered tigers, mercuriality, unpredictability crap is nothing but a pretext to take attention away from our inconsistency. We are inconsistent because we are mediocre, and we are mediocre due to multiple reasons that have been discussed to death.

As a result of our inconsistent cricket but consistent mediocrity, we lose to the top teams more often than not. Beating SA, England and India in successive knockout games doesn't change anything.

There is no formula for finding out when the momentum ends or begins. It's a competitive sport and not a scientific experiment. Luck and chance are factors that come into play all the time.

By "right after" i mean in a narrow time frame after the CT win. I dont know how many days after the CT would've been ideal. I'm not going to sit here and pretend that i do. No one does.

I'm not making any excuses for Pakistan's performance in the NZ ODI series, neither am i saying that there was a guarantee that if we played right after the CT, then we would win. I simple state that when a team is on a roll, they are often tough to stop. Many factors such as team selection, team chemistry, momentum, and team morale contribute in the teams performance. That doesnt mean they are impossible to stop. For all i know, pakistan could've been humiliated even more so if we had played the series in late july last year.

We can make create all these hypothetical scenarios about pakistan winning/losing if the series was held earlier. But idealism isnt a reality in sport. No player knows how they will end up performing in the match when they step onto the field. Likewise, no fan knows the outcome of a hypothetical series for sure.

If this discussion isnt going to go anywhere, then we can agree to disagree. I have my own views. You have yours. As simple as that.
 
HI eveyone.Just joined in after lurking around this site for 2 years.
Absolutely loved assassinated devil posts on this thread.
I have following this fluke thing from Mr mamoon and i will say it is the most ridiculous thing to say.I just made my Account to say this.
Mr mamoon believes that only the most Skilled teams should win tournaments.But it is not only about skill.
IT is also about how you handle pressure,be strong mentally etc.
If it was only about skill then South Africa should have won many world cups.
Absurd to call PCT TROPHY WIN A FLUKE.
I don't know what you will call then South Africa never winning a tournament
 
There is no winning for the Pakistani team with Mr Mamoon. If they get trashed, they suck. If they compete in a close game, they still lost. If they win a close game, they got lucky, if they trash an opponent, the opponent did not show up that day. If they win a CT final, they were extremely lucky, a fluke, opponents were bound to fail.
 
Yes agree with you.He mentions England got a slow surface so they lost....What kind of champion team cannot adapt.
The strong Aussie team of 2000s could win tournaments anywhere as they were skilled as well as mentally tough.
Fakhar zaman is a tough guy,took blows against south africa etc thats what you need.Elgar scored 80 odd on a tough pitch.He may not be that skilled but he sure is gritty.
This pakistan team under Micky has made progress in batting fielding.
 
There is no winning for the Pakistani team with Mr Mamoon. If they get trashed, they suck. If they compete in a close game, they still lost. If they win a close game, they got lucky, if they trash an opponent, the opponent did not show up that day. If they win a CT final, they were extremely lucky, a fluke, opponents were bound to fail.

The only thing I am interested in is consistent success, which will be reflected in our rankings. When was the last time we were ranked in the top four of ODIs for a prolonged period of time?

ICC rankings are not perfect but over the long run, they provide a good measure of the capabilities of the players and the teams. If you are consistently ranked low for years, it is pretty obvious that you are a mediocre player/team.

We are a mediocre team which means that we cannot beat the top sides consistently, and when we do, people try too look too much into it. Every thing is nice and dandy before the inevitable reality check, which is what happened after the Champions Trophy fluke.
 
HI eveyone.Just joined in after lurking around this site for 2 years.
Absolutely loved assassinated devil posts on this thread.
I have following this fluke thing from Mr mamoon and i will say it is the most ridiculous thing to say.I just made my Account to say this.
Mr mamoon believes that only the most Skilled teams should win tournaments.But it is not only about skill.
IT is also about how you handle pressure,be strong mentally etc.
If it was only about skill then South Africa should have won many world cups.
Absurd to call PCT TROPHY WIN A FLUKE.
I don't know what you will call then South Africa never winning a tournament

Welcome to PakPassion.

It is a myth that this Pakistan team is mentally strong and capable of absorbing pressure. A lot of things went our way in the Champions Trophy and it was a flash in the pan. We are still poor chasers and our bowlers lose their heads when they are under the pump.

The most-skilled teams actually do win most of the tournaments. Almost 80% of the ICC tournaments in history have been won by teams who were the most-skilled teams at the time or were the most suited to the conditions at that time.

Pakistan are not the most-skilled and neither better suited to particular conditions than any other team. The likes of England, India, South Africa (however, they are bigger chokers than us) and Australia are more suited to all types of conditions. A lot of things went our way in the Champions Trophy which is why we should not extrapolate anything from that tournament.

The NZ tour was a much needed reminder of where stand as an ODI team.
 
It doesnt matter if it was a fluke or not

What matters is that the winners trophy is with Pakistan
 
Pakistan’s batting maestro, Younis Khan has urged the critics to criticize the system rather than individuals after U-19 team conceded a humiliating defeat in U-19 World Cup semi-final against India.

Chasing 273 runs, Pakistan bundled out for just 69, losing the game by a huge margin of 203 runs.

As Pakistan lost the game, analyst started pointing out at the difference between the coaches of both the teams. Young Indians are mentored and coached by Rahul Dravid, whereas, Monsoor Rana, who himself did not have a successful playing career.

There are suggestions that a legend like Younis Khan can help the cause if he is given the job to nurture young talent.

However, Younis Khan said that he will welcome the decision, but no one should criticize the coaching staff or especially players, who are young and deserve encouragement, after one defeat.

“I am surprised that when the team wins, no one talks about overcoming the lackings, but when the team loses, everyone goes after them,” said Younis Khan while talking to ARY News.

“In the previous U-19 Asia Cup, India U-19 could not perform well, but no one talked about removing Rahul Dravid and see the difference he has made now,” he quoted the example.

“Imagine if I was with this team and we had suffered a similar defeat, everyone would have criticized me that Younis Khan is taking so much money, he is a legend but he is unable to deliver,” he expressed. “This is where system should be discussed rather than the individuals,” he added.

He also pointed out how people were bashing the national side for losing the ODI series against New Zealand by 5-0, but now everything seems settled down after they won the T20I series.

https://arysports.tv/criticize-system-not-individuals-younis/
 
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