Pakistan has announced a 16-player squad for the Sri Lanka tour. On paper, this looks like a routine selection. However, when performance data, domestic statistics, and recent international output are examined, this decision appears deeply flawed.
The real issue is not the squad size—it is how and why certain players were selected, while more deserving performers were ignored.
What Does the Squad Announcement Tell Us?
The squad reflects:
- Repetition of the same names
- Preference for “trusted” players
- Minimal reward for domestic excellence
This raises one central question:
Is this a performance-based squad or a favoritism-based squad?
Statistical Reality: Performance vs Selection
Shadab Khan – Recent Output (International)
Category | Last 10 Matches (Approx.)
Bowling Average | Above 40
Economy Rate | Over 6.0
Wickets | Low impact, no match-winning spell
Batting Average | Below 20

Analysis:
For an all-rounder, these numbers do not justify automatic selection. A player contributing neither with the ball nor the bat cannot be a guaranteed pick.
Faheem Ashraf – Recent Output (International)
Category | Last 10 Matches (Approx.)
Bowling Average | Above 45
Economy Rate | High in middle overs
Batting Contributions | No finishing role impact
Match-Winning Performances | None

Analysis:
Faheem Ashraf has failed to perform in his core role as a bowling all-rounder. Despite this, he continues to be selected—raising serious concerns about PCB’s evaluation process.
Domestic Performers Ignored: The Real Cost
Why Players Like Sufyan Muqeem & Maaz Sadaqat Matter
Player | Domestic Performance Indicator
Sufyan Muqeem | Consistent wickets, control, match impact
Maaz Sadaqat | Strong averages, reliable middle-order runs
These players:
- Performed under domestic pressure
- Delivered consistently
- Were match-relevant
Yet, they were ignored without explanation.
Why Is PCB’s Decision Statistically Wrong?
Because the numbers show:
- Selected players have declining averages
- Ignored players have improving trends
- Selection ignores current form
- Past reputation outweighs present output
Cricket is a numbers-driven sport. PCB is ignoring the numbers.
Mid-Blog Pitfall: Where PCB Gets It Wrong
This is the exact point where the selection process collapses.
What PCB Does
- Protects senior favorites
- Recycles underperformers
- Avoids tough decisions
What Successful Boards Do
- Drop players on form
- Reward domestic performance
- Rotate squads competitively
PCB is doing the opposite—and the stats prove it.
Comparison Table: Favoritism vs Merit
Criteria | Favored Players | Deserving Players
Recent International Stats | Poor | Not given chance
Domestic Performance | Average | Outstanding
Accountability | None | Excluded
Selection Basis | Reputation | Ignored merit
Why This Is Hurting Pakistan Cricket
- Young players lose motivation
- Domestic cricket loses value
- Team performance stagnates
- Same failures repeat every tour
This is not a talent issue.
This is a governance and selection issue.
Final Verdict: Right or Wrong?
This squad selection is statistically and structurally wrong.
Until PCB:
- Uses performance data honestly
- Ends favoritism
- Respects domestic cricket
Pakistan will continue to lag regardless of how many squads are announced.