Cricket
Why Pakistan Cricket Team Needs Shadab Khan?
Shadab Khan remains one of the most misunderstood cricketers in Pakistan’s white-ball setup.
For years, Pakistan cricket has judged him mainly as a leg-spinner who can bat a bit. That reading no longer fits the player in front of us. Shadab is now closer to a batting all-rounder than a bowling all-rounder, and Pakistan should treat him that way if they want to get full value from him.
This does not mean his bowling has no role. He still gives Pakistan overs of leg-spin, variation, control, and wicket-taking ability when conditions help him. But his greater value in modern white-ball cricket now comes from three areas: middle-order batting, elite fielding, and flexible all-round balance.
Pakistan often waste that value by pushing him too low.
Shadab Khan Is a Batting All-Rounder Now
Pakistan Need to Redefine His Role
The problem with Shadab is not Shadab. The problem is how Pakistan often frame him.
When he bats at No. 8, Pakistan treat him as a lower-order hitter who should rescue chaos in the last few overs. That is too narrow. Shadab has better game awareness than that. He can rotate strike, absorb pressure, find boundaries, and build partnerships. Those are middle-order traits, not tail-end traits.
His 71 against Australia in the second ODI showed exactly why Pakistan should look at him differently. Pakistan lost the match, but Shadab’s innings stood out because it had resistance, timing, and responsibility. He did not bat like someone who arrived only to swing hard. He batted like someone who understood match situation.
Then came the third ODI in Lahore on June 4, 2026.
Pakistan were chasing 158 on a difficult surface in a series decider. Australia’s spinners had made the chase uncomfortable, and Pakistan could not afford another soft lower-order collapse. Shadab responded with an unbeaten 29 under pressure and helped guide Pakistan to a four-wicket win. That innings did not need to be explosive to be valuable. It needed calm, judgment, and control. He gave Pakistan all three.
That knock should matter in selection discussions because it showed the exact white-ball skill Pakistan keep underusing. Shadab can finish a chase, but he can also manage one. There is a difference.
Pakistan should not see Shadab only as a leg-spinner who may give them late runs. They should see him as a No. 5 or No. 6 batter who can also bowl useful overs.
Why No. 5 or No. 6 Makes More Sense
Shadab Needs Time, Not Just Overs
Batting at No. 8 gives Shadab too little time to shape an innings.
At that position, he often walks in when Pakistan are already under pressure, the asking rate is high, or wickets have fallen in a heap. That role demands instant impact, but Shadab’s batting is more valuable when he gets time to read the pitch and build momentum.
At No. 5 or No. 6, he can play a proper middle-order role.
He can enter after the platform, counterattack against spin, handle pace through the middle overs, and help Pakistan avoid the soft collapses that have hurt them too often. In T20 cricket, he can float depending on matchup. In ODIs, he should become a regular middle-order option rather than an emergency lower-order repairman.
Modern white-ball teams need depth, but depth should not mean hiding capable batters too low.
Fielding Is Where Shadab Khan Is Pakistan’s Clear No. 1
Shadab Khan Changes the Standard on the Ground
Shadab’s fielding is not a side benefit. It is a major reason he belongs in Pakistan’s white-ball XI.
Pakistan have produced brilliant individual fielders in different eras, but in the current white-ball setup, Shadab remains the most complete fielder. He is sharp inside the circle, quick across the turf, strong under the high ball, and always alert for run-out chances. He gives Pakistan energy in the field, and that matters in formats where one saved boundary or one direct hit can change a match.

His fielding also lifts the team’s body language.
Pakistan’s white-ball cricket has often suffered from sloppy ground fielding, dropped catches, and slow reactions under pressure. Shadab brings the opposite. He attacks the ball, moves with intent, and makes the field look alive.
That skill has real match value even when he does not score heavily or take wickets.
Bowling Still Matters, But It Should Not Define Him Alone
Shadab Khan’s Leg-Spin Is Part of the Package
Shadab’s bowling remains useful, but Pakistan should stop making it the only measure of his selection.
Leg-spinners go through phases. They can look brilliant when confidence, rhythm, and conditions align. They can also leak runs when batters attack early or pitches offer little grip. That is normal for wrist-spin.
The smarter question is not whether Shadab is always Pakistan’s best bowler. The smarter question is whether he gives Pakistan enough combined value with bat, ball, and fielding.
The answer is yes.
Pakistan Must Use Shadab Like a Modern White-Ball Asset
A Clear Role Can Unlock More Consistency
Shadab does not need vague backing. He needs a defined role.
Pakistan should tell him clearly: you are a middle-order batting all-rounder, you will bat around No. 5 or No. 6, you will bowl when matchups suit you, and you will remain the team’s fielding leader.
That clarity can change his career.
It can also help Pakistan fix a long-standing white-ball problem: too much pressure on the top three, too little reliability in the middle, and too many useful players batting in the wrong position.
Shadab Khan is not a luxury pick. Used properly, he is a balance pick.
He gives Pakistan batting depth, spin overs, elite fielding, leadership energy, and big-match experience. That is rare. Pakistan should stop squeezing him into an outdated bowling-all-rounder label and start using him as what he has become.
A batting all-rounder.
A fielding standard-setter. And a player who belongs much higher than No. 8 in Pakistan’s white-ball order.
Cricket
Clinical Bangladesh Seal Historic ODI Series Win Over Australia
Bangladesh cricket has had famous days before, but this one will sit close to the top of the list, The Sports Encounter reported on Thursday. The home side beat Australia by five wickets in the second One-day International to secure their first-ever ODI series victory over the Aussies, completing a result built on discipline, pressure, calm batting, and a disastrous Australian start that shaped the contest long before the chase reached its final stretch.
Australia lost three wickets before scoring a single run. In a rain-affected match where every phase carried extra weight, that opening collapse became the difference between a competitive total and a target Bangladesh could manage with clarity.
The visitors recovered through a century stand between Marnus Labuschagne and Xavier Bartlett, but that partnership only repaired part of the damage. Once Australia began at 0 for 3, they had already surrendered control of the match. Bangladesh sensed it. The crowd sensed it. Australia, even during their recovery, never fully escaped it.
Bangladesh entered the second ODI with a 1-0 lead after winning the first match by 86 runs via the DLS method, a victory that ended a 20-year wait for an ODI win over Australia. That opening result had already created the possibility of history in Mirpur. The second ODI turned that possibility into reality.
Australia’s 0 for 3 Start Set the Tone
In ODI cricket, early wickets matter. Three wickets before the scoreboard moves can break a batting innings before it has shape.
That is exactly what happened to Australia.
Bangladesh came out sharp, direct, and emotionally switched on. Their new-ball spell carried energy without losing control. The lines were aggressive. The fielders stayed alive. The pressure created mistakes, and Australia quickly found themselves in survival mode.
From that point, the innings changed from construction to repair.
Labuschagne and Bartlett deserve credit for fighting back. Their century partnership gave Australia something to bowl at and prevented a complete collapse. But recovery runs do not always carry the same value as pressure-free runs. Australia had already been forced into caution. The innings lost rhythm. The middle overs became about damage limitation rather than dominance.
That is why the final target, adjusted after rain, felt reachable for Bangladesh. A chase of 192 was never automatic under lights and movement, but it was well within range for a side that had already dominated the series in all three departments.
Bangladesh Faced Early Swing, Then Took Control
Australia began their defense with the kind of new-ball spell that briefly reopened the match.
Xavier Bartlett struck in the first over, removing Tanzid Hasan for a duck. The ball was moving both ways, and Bangladesh captain Najmul Hossain Shanto survived an early LBW scare in the second over after successfully reviewing the umpire’s decision.
For a few overs, Australia had the exact start they needed.
But Bangladesh did not panic.
Shanto and Soumya Sarkar absorbed the movement, picked their moments, and slowly took the sting out of the Australian attack. Their partnership of 86 shifted the match back toward Bangladesh. They did it with judgment, but also with intent. A few boundaries and sixes arrived at the right time, making sure Australia could not settle into a long squeeze.
Soumya’s 42 ended when he attempted a reverse sweep against Matthew Renshaw and was caught at slip. Shanto followed soon after for 41, caught behind while trying to cut Riley Meredith.
For a short period, Australia had a way back.
Hridoy and Miraz Finish the Job
The middle-order wobble gave Australia hope, but Bangladesh had enough composure left.
Mosaddek Hossain and Towhid Hridoy steadied the innings, just as they had done in the first ODI. Adam Zampa removed Mosaddek for 15 when he holed out at long off, but Hridoy refused to let the chase slip into chaos.
His unbeaten 40 was not just a useful score. It was the innings that gave Bangladesh the finish they needed. Alongside skipper Mehidy Hasan Miraz, he kept the chase calm, practical, and professional.
That word matters: professional.
Bangladesh did not treat the moment like a surprise. They did not stumble under the weight of history. They played like a team that expected to win because their cricket across the series had earned that belief.
Clinical Bangladesh, More Questions for Australia
Bangladesh’s biggest statement in this series has been their maturity.

They were exuberant, but not reckless. They were aggressive, but not emotional. They made Australia work for every phase of the game and then punished them whenever the visitors slipped.
Australia improved their fielding from the first ODI, but their bowling faded after the early burst. Once Soumya and Shanto settled, the movement became less threatening and the pressure started to shift. Zampa’s wicket of Mosaddek created another opening, but Australia did not sustain enough pressure to force a full collapse.
Their bigger problem remains the top order.
Three wickets for no runs in an ODI is more than a bad start. It exposes preparation, shot selection, and early-innings clarity. Australia recovered enough to compete, but they never recovered enough to command.
Bangladesh, meanwhile, now have a result that will echo far beyond this series. Beating Australia in a bilateral ODI series for the first time is not a routine home achievement. It is a marker of growth, belief, and execution.
A huge crowd turned up despite it being a working day, and they were rewarded with a piece of history. Bangladesh did not just win the match. They owned the important moments.
Australia began with disaster. Bangladesh ended with history.
Cricket
Ben Stokes’ Captaincy Future Uncertain After Fresh Off-Field Controversy
Ben Stokes has built one of modern cricket’s most powerful leadership stories. He dragged England Test cricket out of caution, gave it courage, and turned a struggling red-ball side into one of the most watchable teams in world cricket.
Now, one night out in London has placed that legacy under uncomfortable pressure.
Stokes and England fast bowler Gus Atkinson were dropped from England’s squad for the second Test against New Zealand after a nightclub incident following England’s win at Lord’s, sources informed TheSportsEncounter. The ECB confirmed an investigation into a breach of team protocols, with reports saying the players broke England’s midnight curfew before an altercation took place at the Rex Rooms nightclub in Chelsea.
Joe Root has been named interim captain, which immediately raises the bigger question: is this a short disciplinary pause, or the beginning of the end for Stokes as England Test captain?
The answer depends on what the ECB investigation finds. But even before any final ruling, the damage is clear.
This is not just about Stokes being present at a nightclub. It is about leadership, timing, repeated history, and England’s public image. A captain does not only lead when the ball is moving under lights or when a chase gets tight on the fifth day. A captain also sets the tone away from the field.
That is where Stokes now faces the toughest scrutiny.
The most serious part of the issue is that England already had discipline concerns around team culture. A midnight curfew had reportedly been introduced after previous off-field problems. If the captain himself is found to have broken that rule, the ECB has a leadership problem, not just a player discipline problem.
Stokes also carries past baggage. His 2017 Bristol nightclub incident remains one of the most famous off-field controversies involving an England cricketer. He was later found not guilty of affray in court, but the ECB still handed him an eight-match ban and a £30,000 fine. He had already missed major cricket during that period, including the 2017-18 Ashes. That history makes this latest episode harder to dismiss as one isolated mistake.
ALSO READ: How Lord’s Pitch Fiasco Exposes Modern-Day Batting Technique
Sky Sports voices have taken a measured view. Nasser Hussain and Michael Atherton both argued that the latest incident should not automatically cost Stokes the captaincy. Hussain’s key point was that Stokes should avoid making an emotional decision. That matters because there is a difference between accountability and panic. England must punish wrongdoing if the investigation confirms it, but they should also avoid destroying one of their most influential modern cricketers over a curfew breach alone.
Still, Stokes has a decision to make.
If he wants to continue as captain, he must show the ECB, his teammates, and England fans that he still has control of the dressing room and himself. The standard for a captain is always higher than the standard for a regular player. Atkinson may receive punishment and move on quickly. Stokes will not get that luxury because he wears the armband.
History shows cricket boards can act strongly when captains bring unwanted attention to the team. Andrew Flintoff was stripped of England’s vice-captaincy during the 2007 World Cup after the infamous “Fredalo” drinking incident. Steve Smith lost Australia’s captaincy and received a ban after the 2018 ball-tampering scandal in Cape Town. Hansie Cronje’s career ended completely after South Africa’s match-fixing scandal in 2000.
Those cases were different in severity, especially Cronje and Smith, because they involved the integrity of cricket itself. But they show one common truth: captaincy can disappear quickly when trust breaks.
Stokes’ case sits in a different category. This is not match-fixing. This is not ball-tampering. There is no confirmed finding yet that he initiated violence. That is why calling for his immediate removal would be premature.
But England cannot ignore the pattern either.
The ECB now has three options. It can fine or reprimand Stokes and restore him after the inquiry. It can suspend him for a limited period and allow Root to continue temporarily. Or it can decide that the leadership has become too unstable and move toward a permanent change.
The smartest route may be the middle one. Stokes should not be sacked before all facts are clear. But he also cannot return as if nothing happened. England need a visible reset: a clear apology if wrongdoing is confirmed, a serious internal review of player discipline, and a firm message that captaincy comes with a higher standard.
For Stokes, this may be the most important innings of his captaincy without a bat in hand.
He has survived pressure before. He has rebuilt his image before. He has produced career-defining moments from chaos before. But this time, the challenge is different. He does not need to hit sixes, bowl through pain, or inspire a dressing room with tactical courage.
He needs to prove judgment.
If he does that, this incident may become another painful chapter in a complicated career. If he fails to do that, England may decide that the Bazball era needs a new captain before the damage spreads further.
For now, Stokes has not lost the captaincy permanently. But for the first time since he took charge, the question feels real.
Stay tuned to The Sports Encounter for more in-depth sports news and analysis.
Cricket
Babar Azam Left Out as India Go Full Strength and Pakistan Trust Youth for Asian Games 2026
India and Pakistan have named very different squads for the men’s cricket competition at the Asian Games 2026, and the contrast says a lot about how both boards are reading the tournament.
India have gone in with a powerful squad. Shreyas Iyer will lead a side packed with proven T20 names, including Sanju Samson, Ishan Kishan, Abhishek Sharma, Shivam Dube, Tilak Varma, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Axar Patel, Washington Sundar, Varun Chakaravarthy, Ravi Bishnoi, Jasprit Bumrah, Harshit Rana, Arshdeep Singh and teenage sensation Vaibhav Sooryavanshi.
Pakistan, on the other hand, has taken a different road. Sahibzada Farhan will captain a younger 15-member squad featuring Abdul Samad, Abrar Ahmed, Ahmed Daniyal, Akif Javed, Ali Raza, Arafat Minhas, Haider Ali, Hasan Nawaz, Maaz Sadaqat, Mohammad Salman Mirza, Saad Masood, Saim Ayub, Sufyan Moqim, and Usman Khan.
The immediate question writes itself.
Why have India named such a strong team while Pakistan have gone with younger players and limited international experience?
And the more emotional question, especially for fans, is even sharper.
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Is India afraid of losing to Pakistan at the Asian Games?
The honest answer is more layered than social media will allow.
India are probably not afraid in the simple sense of fear. The BCCI has enough depth, money, exposure and T20 resources to send a competitive team to almost any tournament. But India’s selection does show one thing clearly: the BCCI is taking the Asian Games seriously because losing a medal event to Pakistan would carry a heavy emotional and public cost.
This is where the Asian Games become different from a regular bilateral series or an ICC tournament.
The Asian Games cricket competition is not an ICC event. It is part of a continental multi-sport event. That changes the pressure structure. Teams are not only playing for rankings, trophies or broadcast cycles. They are playing for medals, national pride and Olympic-style visibility.
For India, that matters.
The BCCI does not want cricket at the Asian Games to look like a development camp. India are the defending champions from the previous Asian Games cricket event, and their 2026 selection reflects that responsibility. A squad with Shreyas Iyer, Bumrah, Samson, Ishan, Axar, Arshdeep and Washington Sundar sends a clear message: India want control, credibility and another gold-medal run.
Pakistan’s selection sends a different message.
PCB appears to be treating the Asian Games as a chance to test squad depth, reward emerging performers and build a wider T20 pool. Sahibzada Farhan is experienced enough to lead the group, Saim Ayub brings left-handed flair at the top, Usman Khan offers wicketkeeping and power-hitting value, Abrar Ahmed gives mystery spin, and names like Ali Raza, Maaz Sadaqat, Saad Masood and Akif Javed bring freshness.
That strategy has cricketing logic.
The risk is also obvious.
In a Pakistan-India game, logic rarely survives the first over.
India’s Squad Shows Respect for the Tournament
India’s Asian Games squad has balance, depth and experience.
The top order has multiple options. Shreyas Iyer brings leadership and middle-order composure. Abhishek Sharma and Ishan Kishan can attack early. Sanju Samson gives India wicketkeeping flexibility and an experienced attacking batter. Tilak Varma offers calm left-handed stability. Shivam Dube gives six-hitting power against spin and seam.
The all-round section is even stronger. Axar Patel and Washington Sundar give India batting depth and control with the ball. Nitish Kumar Reddy adds modern T20 value as a seam-bowling all-rounder.
The bowling attack looks too strong for a secondary continental event. Bumrah’s inclusion alone changes the tone of the squad. Arshdeep Singh gives left-arm variation and death-overs skill. Harshit Rana brings pace and aggression. Varun Chakaravarthy and Ravi Bishnoi offer two different spin threats.
This is not a casual squad. This is a medal-winning squad.
India could have sent a more experimental side and still remained competitive. Instead, BCCI selected a team that can handle knockout pressure, rivalry pressure and medal pressure. That tells us India want to avoid embarrassment, especially against Pakistan.
Does that mean fear?
Not exactly.
It means India understand the cost of losing.
A Pakistan win over India at the Asian Games would not be treated like a small result just because the tournament sits outside the ICC structure. Fans would not say, “It was only the Asian Games.” Television debates, social media timelines and political emotions would turn it into a national cricket event overnight.
The BCCI knows this. That is why India have picked a squad strong enough to remove excuses.
Pakistan’s Squad Looks Like a Rebuild, But It Carries Risk
Pakistan’s squad is clearly built around youth, freshness and future testing.
Sahibzada Farhan is the right kind of captain for this group. He has T20I experience, he has domestic pedigree, and he has gone through enough selection cycles to understand how Pakistan cricket works. Abdul Samad as vice-captain shows PCB want to give younger players leadership exposure.
ALSO READ: Why Pakistan Cricket Team Needs Shadab Khan?
Saim Ayub gives Pakistan one of their most exciting batting options. Hasan Nawaz, Haider Ali and Usman Khan can all play aggressive cricket. Abrar Ahmed and Sufyan Moqim offer spin options. Mohammad Salman Mirza, Ahmed Daniyal, Ali Raza and Akif Javed give Pakistan pace-bowling variety.
The squad has potential.
The concern is pressure handling.
Asian Games cricket may not be an ICC event, but a Pakistan-India match will not feel small. The players will face the same noise, the same fan emotion and the same judgment that follows every Pakistan-India cricket contest.
That is where Pakistan’s approach becomes debatable.
If PCB want to develop young players, the Asian Games are a useful platform. If PCB want to win gold and possibly beat India, leaving out senior match-winners becomes harder to justify.
Pakistan have often spoken about building depth. That is important. But depth should grow around proven quality, not always in place of it.
This is why Babar Azam’s omission stands out.
Why Was Babar Azam Left Out After a Brilliant PSL 2026?
Babar Azam’s absence is the biggest talking point in Pakistan’s squad.
On form alone, he had a strong case.
Babar finished PSL 2026 as the leading run-scorer with 588 runs. He averaged 73.50 and scored at a strike rate close to 146. He also produced two centuries and three half-centuries. For a player often criticized for T20 tempo, those numbers answered many questions.
This was not a slow, reputation-based season. This was a high-impact T20 season.
Babar scored heavily. He scored consistently. He scored faster than many expected. He also led Peshawar Zalmi to the PSL title, which strengthened his leadership value.
So why did PCB still leave him out?
There are a few possible explanations.
First, PCB may be protecting senior players from workload in a non-ICC event. Babar remains central to Pakistan cricket across formats, and the board may want to manage his schedule.
Second, the selectors may be committed to a T20 reset. Pakistan’s recent T20 planning has leaned toward faster starts, flexible batting roles and younger power players. Babar’s traditional role as an anchor may still divide selectors, even after his improved PSL strike rate.
Third, PCB may see the Asian Games as a development tournament rather than a must-win competition. In that case, Babar’s omission becomes part of a wider experiment.
But here is the problem.
Babar deserved selection.
A player who dominates PSL 2026 with 588 runs at that average and strike rate should not be ignored easily. Selection cannot be based only on future planning when present form is that strong. Babar did exactly what critics asked him to do. He scored more freely, won matches, led from the front and showed he could still control a T20 tournament.
Leaving him out after that campaign sends a confusing message.
If PSL performance matters, Babar should have been rewarded. If PSL performance does not matter, then PCB must explain what domestic T20 success is supposed to mean.
The stronger cricketing move would have been to include Babar and still give opportunities to younger players around him. He did not need to captain the side. He did not need to block the development plan. He could have played as the senior batter who stabilizes pressure moments and guides inexperienced players in high-stakes games.
That would have helped Pakistan more than hurt them.
Pakistan Could Miss Babar Most Against India
Against smaller teams, Pakistan’s young squad may look exciting. They can play fearless cricket, attack the powerplay and rely on raw talent.
Against India, the game changes.
India’s bowling attack has Bumrah, Arshdeep, Varun, Bishnoi, Axar and Washington. That is a serious T20 attack. It has new-ball threat, middle-overs spin control and death-overs skill.
This is exactly where Babar’s value increases.
Pakistan do not only need hitters against India. They need someone who can absorb pressure without freezing the scoreboard. They need someone who can bat through a collapse. They need someone who has lived through India-Pakistan pressure before.
Babar has that experience.
He may divide opinion among fans, but his class is beyond debate. In a knockout or medal match, Pakistan may regret leaving out a batter who had just produced one of the best PSL seasons of his career.
A young team can surprise opponents. It can also panic when the lights get too bright.
That is the selection gamble PCB have taken.
Is India Afraid of Losing to Pakistan?
India’s squad selection will naturally invite that question.
Why send such a strong team if the Asian Games are not an ICC event? Why include Bumrah? Why pick so many proven names? Why not use the tournament purely for young players?
The answer lies in sporting politics and rivalry pressure.
India are not afraid of Pakistan in the way fans use the word “afraid.” India have enough recent confidence, squad depth and T20 experience to back themselves. But India know Pakistan are dangerous in one-off games. India also know that an Asian Games defeat to Pakistan would become a massive story, regardless of the tournament’s official status.
So the BCCI has acted like a board that wants to win, protect its reputation and avoid unnecessary risk.
That is smart planning, not fear.
At the same time, strong selections often reveal what a team values. India value the Asian Games gold medal enough to send a strong squad. They value the Pakistan rivalry enough to remove complacency from the equation. They value cricket’s place in multi-sport events enough to treat the competition with seriousness.
Pakistan, in contrast, look like they are balancing future planning with medal ambition.
That can work if the young players deliver.
It will be criticized heavily if Pakistan lose badly to India.
The Non-ICC Factor Matters
The Asian Games are not run like an ICC tournament. That matters because national boards have more room to shape their squad philosophy.
Some teams may treat the event as a medal priority. Some may use it for exposure. Some may rest senior players. Some may balance development with competitiveness.
India have clearly leaned toward competitiveness. Pakistan have leaned toward development.
Neither approach is automatically wrong.
But Pakistan cricket operates in a different emotional environment. Every selection becomes a debate. Every omission becomes a story. Every India match becomes a public referendum on planning, courage and cricketing identity.
That is why Babar Azam’s absence will not disappear quietly.
PCB can say this is about youth. Fans can still ask why the best batter from PSL 2026 is sitting out. PCB can say the Asian Games are not an ICC event. Fans can still ask why India are treating it seriously. PCB can say young players need exposure. Fans can still ask why exposure and experience could not exist in the same squad.
Those are fair questions.
What This Means for Pakistan
Pakistan’s squad has talent, but it now carries a heavier burden.
Saim Ayub must provide early momentum. Sahibzada Farhan must lead with maturity. Usman Khan and Haider Ali must convert starts into match-winning innings. The bowlers must handle pressure against experienced batting units. The uncapped players must learn quickly.
This tournament can become a breakthrough stage for Pakistan’s next T20 group.
It can also expose the gap between potential and pressure-tested quality.
That is the fine line PCB are walking.
The most balanced criticism is this: Pakistan did not need to copy India’s selection model, but they also did not need to leave Babar Azam out completely.
Babar’s PSL 2026 campaign earned him a place. His experience would have made the squad stronger. His presence would have helped younger players. His form deserved respect.
Pakistan could still win without him. T20 cricket allows surprises. Young players can turn into stars in one tournament.
But if Pakistan face India in a pressure game and the batting collapses, the first question will be painfully simple.
Where was Babar?
Final Word
India’s Asian Games 2026 squad looks like a team built to win gold. Pakistan’s squad looks like a team built to test the future.
That difference has created the story before the tournament has even begun.
The BCCI have made a strong statement by sending experience, power and bowling depth. PCB have made a bold call by trusting young players and leaving out senior names, including Babar Azam and Shaheen Afridi.
India are not necessarily afraid of losing to Pakistan. But they respect the damage such a defeat could cause. That is why their squad looks serious.
Pakistan are not necessarily wrong to invest in youth. But ignoring Babar after a brilliant PSL 2026 feels harsh, especially when his form, experience and improved T20 tempo made him one of the most deserving names available.
The Asian Games may not be an ICC event, but India vs Pakistan never needs an ICC logo to feel massive.
And if both sides meet in Japan, the debate around these two squads will become more than a selection argument.
It will become the story of the match.
Stay tuned to The Sports Encounter for more authentic sports news and analysis.
