Pakistan did not do much wrong at World Cup and the future is bright
NOW that the World Cup fever is over for Pakistan fans, it is time to assess what the team did right or wrong in England over the last one month. Despite having the worst possible start to its campaign, Pakistan did what Pakistan does usually, i.e. kept its fans, even the neutrals, on the edge of their seats till the last game it played.
Only Pakistan, given its unpredictable traits, could surrender so meekly as it did in the first game against the West Indies, and then valiantly fight till the end for the last spot of the semi-finals.
Much has been said and written about the Kiwis making it to the last four at the expense of Pakistan. So we are going to skip that part and discuss where Pakistan stands now. Arguably, this was Pakistan’s best World Cup campaign in over 20 years. And even though the team won’t be playing the semi-final this year, if their wins against England, South Africa, Bangladesh and New Zealand are something to go by, it will be playing more of them in the future for sure.
Analysis: Nothing shows Pakistan its own true self clearer than cricket
When the World Cup 2011 ended in tears for Pakistan against India at Mohali, there was nothing to write home about in terms of future prospects. Ahmed Shahzad looked promising but very inconsistent. Umar Akmal was already in bad books of many for his knack of getting in trouble and poor outings with the bat. While the trends of batting in limited-overs cricket were changing rapidly, we had Younis Khan, Asad Shafiq and Misbah-ul-Haq in the middle-order and hence moving backwards.
Pakistan’s express pace bowler, Shoaib Akhtar, was forced to announce his retirement from international cricket midway through the tournament. And his new ball partner, Umar Gul, only bowled well when he was in rhythm. For a short period of time, the pace bowling had to take the back seat in a country where it has thrived for decades just because it didn’t have enough resources. In short, while the team had made it to the semis, there was no silver lining for Pakistan.
And the same could be said for the team that played the World Cup 2015.
In a classic Pakistani manner, nobody knew who would captain the side till the very last moment. Ahmed Shahzad and Umar Akmal had become proven failures by then. Even a school kid could tell just by looking at them that their bodies weren’t following the line of the ball. Nasir Jamshed had become the villain overnight for his failures with the bat. Younis Khan, the most senior player in the side, had become a liability in one-day cricket by then while young Sohaib Maqsood was labelled as Inzamam Jr for his elegant wrist work. As it eventually turned out, fielding was the only thing in which he was closest to being Inzamam. Only Wahab Riaz looked good in patches and Sarfraz Ahmed showed what value he brought to the team with the bat.
Now compare those previous two outings with the World Cup 2019 and ask yourself whether the future looks as gloomy as it did after the previous two editions? The answer is ‘no, it doesn’t’. The last time Pakistan had a settled top 3, nobody had even heard of iPhones. The last time Pakistan had such depth in its batting, America hadn’t waged the war on terror in Iraq and Afghanistan. And the last time Pakistan had the luxury of quality pace bowling, Virat Kohli was playing U-15 club cricket.