In a candid admission, Pakistan’s T20 World Cup captain Salman Agha has owned up to the team’s dismal showing in the tournament, pinpointing a failure to make smart calls under pressure as the key downfall. Despite scraping a narrow 5-run victory over Sri Lanka on Saturday, Pakistan crashed out of contention for the 2026 semifinals, edged out by New Zealand’s superior run rate.
Speaking at the post-match press conference in Candy, Agha didn’t mince words. ‘Looking at the entire tournament, we didn’t perform well,’ he stated. ‘Our middle order struggled consistently, and we leaned too heavily on Sahibzada Farhan for runs. The other batters couldn’t step up.’
Agha highlighted the intense pressure of ICC events, stressing the need for sharper decision-making. ‘We always face pressure in these tournaments. We need to make better decisions under it. The ones we made weren’t right,’ he added.
Farhan shone brightly, smashing two centuries and 383 runs to shatter Virat Kohli’s record for most runs in a T20 World Cup. Shadab Khan followed with 118 runs in six innings, but it wasn’t enough to salvage the campaign.
Questions are swirling around team management choices: Babar Azam’s repeated chances despite poor form, limited opportunities for Fakhar Zaman and Abrar Ahmed, misuse of bowlers, and a shaky batting order. Captain Agha faces scrutiny too.
Reports indicate PCB chief Mohsin Naqvi is furious with the performance. He may strip Agha of the T20 captaincy and review the futures of Babar Azam, Usman Khan, Shadab Khan, and Agha himself in T20s.
Head coach Mike Hesson has reportedly urged a shift towards youth, investing in fresh talent to adapt to modern T20 demands and rebuild the squad from the ground up. Pakistan now enters a phase of introspection, with major changes on the horizon.