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KOLKATA: Pakistan captain Babar Azam was described as “depressed” and under pressure to save his job Sunday after the team crashed out of the Cricket World Cup, failing to make the semi-finals for a second successive tournament.

A 93-run loss to England sealed Pakistan’s fate, ending the 1992 champions’ already slim hopes of squeezing into the last four.

Former Pakistan captain and ex-chairman of the country’s cricket board Ramiz Raja said that 29-year-old Azam was “depressed” over the reaction at home.

Fans’ anger would have been made more acute by seeing arch-rivals India sweeping to eight wins out of eight, becoming the first team to reach the semi-finals.

Azam’s team lost five of their nine games including a seven-wicket mauling by India in front of more than 100,000 fans in Ahmedabad.

That was India’s eighth victory in eight World Cup games against their neighbours.

Pakistan also lost to Afghanistan for the first time.

Azam made 320 runs at the World Cup with four fifties at an average of 40 and remains the world’s second highest-ranked batsman. He has almost 13,000 runs in all international cricket.

However, it was his captaincy in India, which was questioned when he faced accusations of lacking aggression in field settings.

Pakistan media consistently accused him of favouring his friends in selection.

“I get behind Babar. Babar is very, very close to me. He’s a young guy that needs to be taken on the journey, he needs to be shown the ropes,” said Pakistan’s director of cricket Mickey Arthur.

‘Time to grow’

Azam has been captain of the Test and ODI teams since 2020.

“He’s still learning all the time. We know he’s a very, very fine batsman. He learns every day with his captaincy,” added Arthur.

“We have to allow him the time to grow. And in order to do that, you make mistakes. It’s not a crime to make mistakes as long as you learn from those mistakes.”

Babar Azam denies Pakistan captaincy has affected his form at World Cup

Despite the despondency of fans at home, Azam and his team found sympathy in India.

Only a smattering of Pakistan fans – mostly expatriates – were at the venues as visa complications effectively meant a ban on those wishing to cross the border.

As a Pakistan squad playing in India for the first time in seven years, they were virtually confined to hotel rooms once playing and training commitments were completed.

Security details would accompany players and squad members if they wanted to venture outside their hotel.

Arthur compared the situation to touring “in Covid times”.

Raja believes that Azam may become the first victim of bloodletting in a Pakistan cricketing environment often plagued by infighting. “There’s so much pressure on him that he may leave the job,” Raja told the BBC’s Test Match Special.

“Back home there has obviously been a massive backlash, as expected. The Pakistan media have targeted certain players, and especially Babar Azam.

“It’s just a World Cup so you have to take the heat somehow. The problem with this team is it has the potential to play modern-day cricket but they have been a bit shy and timid with their approach.”

Comments

Comments are closed.

Mark Nov 12, 2023 07:34pm
Yes it is not a crime to make mistake if they are not deliberate and secondly making the same mistakes and expect a different result. Not using your grey matter to marshal your team to get positive results is a crime.
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Fastrack© Nov 12, 2023 08:09pm
In today's world, a captain for there years and loosing consistently and say's that he is still learning is the lamest excuse and shows his incompetency.
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Fawad Alam Nov 12, 2023 08:31pm
Learning disability is a fact and Babar is the best example.
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Fawad Alam Nov 12, 2023 08:33pm
Not everyone can become leaders some make great leaders and rest are Babars.
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Ashfaq, Bradford Nov 12, 2023 08:36pm
Babar is opposite of captain. Poor chap got stuck in captaincy like a baby in a top less bar.
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Moinuddin Nov 12, 2023 08:41pm
Babar: Not crime to make mistakes. Nawaz: Not crime to loot.
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Pakistani1 Nov 12, 2023 09:12pm
No doubt it is a game. However the performance of various players and the captaincy showed that full effort was not being applied and silly mistakes were continuously made without any reprimanding.
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Kashif ALI Nov 12, 2023 09:26pm
World cup is not some domestic league or PSL. It is a highly reputed and coveted ICC tournament and the winner is called World Champions. I believe that Pakistani players were not honest with themselves. Hasan Ali's self assessment on his performance during this World cup is one such example. Terming his performance satisfactory, this is a sham and highly hypocritical view of a professional, to the extent of a lie, which no one would like to believe. His past performances in ICC tournaments are a big testimony that he was not even selected for this world cup, but for Naseem Shah. Players need to be honest. Accepting failure, accepting that they don't have that skill to be a 350+ scoring team, would help a lot in improvement. PSL (read: domestic Cricket) is a bogus talent hunt enterprise. Learning with passion helps being improved. Rohit Sharma hit the fastest century for India in this World cup against Afghans. (63 balls). Today, KL Rahul broke that record. (1/2)
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Kashif ALI Nov 12, 2023 09:33pm
Our Talent is very pure and Raw. Coaches could not process that raw talent into a finished one because Players don't want to learn. They just want to mint money and get fame. An old-bearded Psychologist is accompanying this team in this World cup. Whenever, he tried to arrange a session, Player rebuffed him. Yes, Babar must be questioned for his nepotism in sticking with Shadab Khan. Why? Why not Abrar or Usama or even Imad Wasim? Imam-ul-Haq was simply not mentally in this tournament. Why? Just look at his intent and body language. Nawaz, Haris Rauf were a big disappointment. Pakistani fielding Coach Aftab very rightly said that Pakistani approach has always been a Reactive one, instead of Proactive one. These two words are buzz words in any Corporate world. Reactive approach will never work and it will lead to a career death of a professional. Same for Cricket. We must learn from India. How they have transformed themselves since 2006-7 into a Cricket Giant which Australia was.
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KHURRAM ALI MIRZA Nov 13, 2023 11:13am
There was a lack of Planning according to changing conditions, At some time we had to be defensive while on other part we need to be aggressive but this was not adopted timely by the Captain and we saw the results. Most of the Players were not utilize on merit like Shahnawaz Dhani.
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John Nov 13, 2023 03:24pm
Sports to Economics...today's world run on brain power...and not on paindoo power!
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Sumaroo Nov 16, 2023 08:33am
@Mark, Indeed a mega crime! and those who selected this due are the real culprits!
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