It was supposed to be a routine start. Chasing a modest 148 against the Netherlands in their T20 World Cup 2026 opener, Pakistan looked firmly in control at 98/2 in the 13th over. The Eden Gardens crowd anticipated a comfortable win. But what followed was a shocking implosion—a Pakistan T20 World Cup collapse so dramatic it nearly ended their campaign before it even began [[1]].
In just 18 deliveries, they lost five wickets for a mere 16 runs, plunging from 98/2 to 114/7. Panic set in. Social media erupted. The Dutch, sensing history, tightened their grip. And then, out of nowhere, came Faheem Ashraf—a man with nothing to lose and everything to prove.
The foundation was solid. Openers had done their job. Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan were rotating strike and picking gaps. At 98/2, the required run rate was under 7. Victory seemed inevitable. But cricket, especially T20 cricket, is a game of momentum—and Pakistan lost theirs in a heartbeat.
The turning point came when leg-spinner Shariz Ahmad ripped through the middle order. His variations—googlies, flippers, and top-spinners—exposed Pakistan’s lack of adaptability. One by one, the batters fell: Iftikhar Ahmed, Salman Agha, and Shadab Khan all perished playing across the line or misreading the spin. The scoreboard froze. Confidence evaporated.
This wasn’t just a bad patch—it was a systemic failure. Here’s how the collapse unfolded ball-by-ball between overs 13 and 16:
In just 18 balls, Pakistan went from cruising to needing 34 off 21 with only three wickets left. The pressure was suffocating.
Enter Faheem Ashraf. Known more for his bowling than his batting, he walked in with the weight of a nation on his shoulders. What followed was pure theatre. He didn’t just hit boundaries—he dismantled the Dutch attack with fearless intent.
His unbeaten 29 came off just 11 balls, featuring four sixes and one four. But beyond the numbers, it was his clarity of thought that stood out. He knew exactly which bowler to target (Bas de Leede), which lengths to attack (full and straight), and when to take the single to keep strike. This wasn’t blind aggression—it was calculated, high-stakes execution [[1]].
With 22 needed off 12 balls, the 19th over bowled by Bas de Leede was make-or-break. Faheem turned it into a clinic:
Nineteen runs from the over. Game over. Pakistan won by three wickets with three balls to spare.
Chasing 148 should have been straightforward. So why did Pakistan stumble? Three key reasons:
For a deeper dive into Pakistan’s batting frailties, see our analysis on [INTERNAL_LINK:pakistan-t20-batting-lineup-weaknesses].
This narrow escape must serve as a brutal wake-up call. Against India’s world-class attack—featuring Jasprit Bumrah, Kuldeep Yadav, and Varun Chakravarthy—such complacency will be punished mercilessly. Key takeaways:
Faheem Ashraf’s heroics saved Pakistan from embarrassment, but they cannot mistake luck for strategy. The Pakistan T20 World Cup collapse against the Netherlands exposed dangerous vulnerabilities in their batting DNA. If they don’t address these issues before their marquee clash with India, their World Cup journey might end not with a whimper—but with another, more final, collapse.
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