Pakistan's 2026 T20 World Cup exit: Tactical flaws and batting failures

Pakistan's 2026 ICC Men's T20 World Cup campaign ended in the Super 8 stage after a narrow win over Sri Lanka (see match report), due to tactical errors, batting collapses, and bowling inconsistencies that plagued the team throughout.

Under captain Salman Agha, Pakistan failed to advance from Group 2, a letdown despite early promise. The batting relied heavily on opener Sahibzada Farhan, while former captain Babar Azam struggled with a strike rate of 112.34. Middle-order collapses repeatedly derailed chases and defenses in high-pressure games.

Tactics faced heavy scrutiny, notably against India, where fielding first on a spin-friendly pitch and delaying Usman Tariq's introduction backfired. Bowling faltered in death overs; against England, they couldn't defend 165 as Harry Brook's century sealed a loss.

Even in the decisive Super 8 win over Sri Lanka—detailed in our prior coverage—Shaheen Afridi leaked boundaries in the final over, nearly costing the game. These patterns exposed strategic and execution gaps, hastening Pakistan's ouster on February 28, 2026.

ተያያዥ ጽሁፎች

Indian cricket team celebrates dominant 96-run T20 World Cup 2026 final win over New Zealand at Narendra Modi Stadium.
በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

India defend T20 World Cup title with 96-run rout of New Zealand; Ganguly slams toss decision

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India successfully defended their T20 World Cup title, thrashing New Zealand by 96 runs in the ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 final at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad. Posting 255 for 5, India dominated as New Zealand collapsed to 159 all out. Sanju Samson was Player of the Tournament for his 89, while Jasprit Bumrah's 4 for 15 earned Player of the Match. Former captain Sourav Ganguly called New Zealand's decision to field first 'a recipe for disaster'.

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የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
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