Spin attack could upset favorites despite India boycott
5 min readFeb 3, 2026 09:13 PM IST Uncertainty has long been Pakistan’s World Cup calling card. Rarely do they arrive with a clear method to disrupt one. In Lahore last week, Salman Agha’s side looked nearly set to channel momentum into the T20 World Cup, having blanked Australia 3–0 and presented a spin-heavy template. When the spotlight rests on the six-hitting frenzy in India, Pakistan could have slipped into the tournament as its on-field disruptors, armed with a diminishing T20 trait for the turners in Sri Lanka. But by announcing a boycott of India in the group stage six days out from the tournament, Pakistan embraced uncertainty again, surrendering two points. Undue pressure isn’t exactly their forte, and it remains a tough task to decipher what Pakistan could produce with their backs against the wall. Despite their vaunted pace attack at the 2022 World Cup, Pakistan faltered by one run against Zimbabwe after losing to India in the Super 12. They were in the final 15 days later. In 2024, it was an embarrassment …
