Pakistan’s Twenty20 captain Shahid Afridi
on Thursday said he hoped a tough World Twenty20 draw would motivate
his team to win the title for the first time in seven years and beat
arch-rival India along the way.
The 2009 champions are placed in Group 2 of the Super Ten round in the sixth edition of the World T20 to be held from March 8 – April 3 2016, along with hosts India, Australia, New Zealand, and a yet to be decided qualifier.
Their second match will be against India, a team they have never beaten in either a traditional one-day World Cup or the newer World T20.
Afridi said: “We have a tough draw but I am hopeful that this challenge will pump-up my team to win the title and on the way beat India.”
Pakistan lost to India in both the group round and final of the inaugural World T20 in 2007 and then in two subsequent tournaments.
They have also lost to India every time they have faced them in six World Cups.
But Afridi said it was time for a change. “I don’t want to live in history,” he said. “Whatever mistakes we usually make in the matches against India we have to overcome them.”
Pakistan’s recent form does not augur well. Last month they lost to England 3-0 in a T20 series in the United Arab Emirates, slipping to six in the rankings.
“We made school boy errors and despite putting up good fights in all three matches we lost by narrow margins so we have to be on our toes and should not repeat those mistakes,” said Afridi, who is set to draw the curtain on his two-decade long career after the event.
Pakistan have three T20 matches on their tour of New Zealand next month before featuring in the six-nation Asia Cup T20 in Bangladesh in February.
“We have enough matches before the World T20 so we have to find a settled combination and I hope we do well in these matches and carry that form into the World T20.”
The 2009 champions are placed in Group 2 of the Super Ten round in the sixth edition of the World T20 to be held from March 8 – April 3 2016, along with hosts India, Australia, New Zealand, and a yet to be decided qualifier.
Their second match will be against India, a team they have never beaten in either a traditional one-day World Cup or the newer World T20.
Afridi said: “We have a tough draw but I am hopeful that this challenge will pump-up my team to win the title and on the way beat India.”
Pakistan lost to India in both the group round and final of the inaugural World T20 in 2007 and then in two subsequent tournaments.
They have also lost to India every time they have faced them in six World Cups.
But Afridi said it was time for a change. “I don’t want to live in history,” he said. “Whatever mistakes we usually make in the matches against India we have to overcome them.”
Pakistan’s recent form does not augur well. Last month they lost to England 3-0 in a T20 series in the United Arab Emirates, slipping to six in the rankings.
“We made school boy errors and despite putting up good fights in all three matches we lost by narrow margins so we have to be on our toes and should not repeat those mistakes,” said Afridi, who is set to draw the curtain on his two-decade long career after the event.
Pakistan have three T20 matches on their tour of New Zealand next month before featuring in the six-nation Asia Cup T20 in Bangladesh in February.
“We have enough matches before the World T20 so we have to find a settled combination and I hope we do well in these matches and carry that form into the World T20.”
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