Sarfaraz refuses to blame senior men for Pakistan's troubles | The Daily Star
10:55 AM, June 17, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 10:57 AM, June 17, 2019

Sarfaraz refuses to blame senior men for Pakistan's troubles

Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed refused to put the blame for his team's defeat to India and poor World Cup on the senior players, saying all his squad needed to step up their game.

India's comprehensive victory at Old Trafford left Pakistan in ninth place after just one win from five matches and needing a huge turnaround in form to have any chance of making the semi-finals.

Pakistan were outclassed with India making 336 for five and apart from a 104-run second-wicket partnership between Fakhar Zaman and Babar Azam, Pakistan never looked like mounting a real challenge.

"It definitely is very disappointing. It is hard. We were going really well, especially if you talk about our batting. I thought, when we lost the first wicket, Imam and Fakhar, they made a good partnership," Sarfaraz said.

"Our manager just said stay on the wicket and just try to hit fours and sixes. Unfortunately, we lost too many wickets, and that's why we lost the match," he added, referring to a slump which saw four wickets fall in three overs.

After the match, some in the Pakistan media questioned whether Sarfaraz got the support he needed from his senior players.

The 38-year-old all-rounder Shoaib Malik, dismissed for a duck on Sunday, has yet to hit double figures in his three World Cup innings and has bowled just eight overs of his spin in the tournament -- with just a solitary over against India.

Mohamed Hafeez, like Shoaib a former Pakistan captain, also failed to deliver in the crunch match, making just nine as the middle order collapsed.

However, Sarfaraz said the whole team had to share the responsibility for the loss. "I don't think you can talk about only the senior players, I think you have to talk about the whole team. I think the whole team is not performing well in all three departments, not fielding, not bowling, and not batting," he said.

The decision to ask India to bat failed to deliver the anticipated early breakthroughs but the skipper defended his choice, pointing the finger at his bowlers, whose length was often too short.

"I think we won a good toss. I think we didn't capitalize on that -- when we saw the pitch, there was a little bit of moisture on the pitch, we (wanted to use) the conditions. I think we didn't hit the right areas," he added.


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