Pakistan lost the world series of cricket 2-0 in the Final against Australia in 1990.
New zealand weren't a great team back then so I wouldn't count them judging by their test record against us whenever we visited them.
Indians had the better of Pakistan until the final of the Sharjah cup against Miandad turned it around. But it around around in faovr of pakistan afterwards
Aamer Malik, Aaqib Javed, Abdul Qadir, Ijaz Ahmed, Javed Miandad, Mansoor Akhtar, Maqsood Rana, Mushtaq Ahmed, Nadeem Ghauri, Rameez Raja, Saeed Anwar, Saleem Malik, Saleem Yousuf, Shoaib Mohammad, Tauseef Ahmed, Waqar Younis and Wasim Akram.
This is the team that Pakistan played with in the start of early 90s.
Saeed Anwar the breakout star of 1990 series hand a couple of centuries against Srilanka in Australia, but he was injured before 1992 so he didn't participate.
Waqar Younis the lethal strike bowler for Pakistan back then didn't participate either.
If Pakistan were favorites against a very consistent English side then you only have to see the same tournament we were bowled out for 72 against the same team.
What I have noticed is your die hard fandom for Imran Khan, and your ability to distort facts without proper analysis, and skewing it to favor your arguement.
And I don't need to defend Sarfraz all the time but when you make blanket statements like saying Sarfraz has fitness worse than Zulfiqar Babar then obviously you are yourself making a mockery of your extensive and credible knowledge on PP
The only arguement I made here are the teams that change their perception over the years after they have performed well in the world cup.
The term minnow is arbitrary, Srilanka and Zimbabwe were both minnows in 1987 and 1992 world cups. However perceptions change over the years and their resultant victory in 1996 cemented their place as a top side.
Excluding the choking nations and the founders of the great game, the game itself has not categorized any team as a minnow or a great team. The team's performances dictate that.
It is a loose term and it does not just refer to test playing nations only.
Some teams started off as minnows but improved their reputation over a period of time. Bangladesh and Ireland are prime examples.
India was not a minnow, but nobody thought they could beat the great WI side in 1983, nor did they expect Pakistan to finish off NZ and England in knockouts.
Minnow is a word that requires context, and without comparison it is not a word that should exist in definition. In your dictionary minnow means the top 8 playing nations, which is why you are going at lengths to explain something that in cricketing terms doesn't really have a meaning.