
In the aftermath of Pakistan’s embarrassing exit from the T20 World Cup 2026 Super 8 stage – marking the fourth consecutive ICC tournament without a semi-final appearance – captain Salman Ali Agha faced a hostile press conference where he was grilled with pointed questions about his future and whether he was merely a “dummy captain” for head coach Mike Hesson. Despite mounting pressure and reports that PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi has already decided to remove him regardless of results, Agha navigated the stormy waters with remarkable restraint.
Pakistan face elimination in Pallekele
The Men in Green’s campaign ended in cruel fashion on Saturday despite defeating co-hosts Sri Lanka by five runs at Pallekele International Stadium. Chasing a semifinal berth, Pakistan needed to restrict Sri Lanka to 147 or less to overhaul New Zealand’s net run rate. However, Dasun Shanaka’s blistering unbeaten 76 off 31 balls powered the home side to 207, sealing Pakistan’s fate despite their 212 total.
This elimination follows previous failures in the 2023 ODI World Cup, 2024 T20 World Cup, and 2025 Champions Trophy – a dismal streak that has pushed Pakistani cricket into crisis mode .
‘Will you leave captaincy yourself or will PCB remove you?’
During the tense post-match media interaction, a journalist delivered a blunt question in Hindi: “Khud kaptani chhodenge ya PCB hatayega?” (Will you leave captaincy yourself or will the board remove you?).
Agha, who managed just 60 runs in six innings during the tournament, responded with composure: “I think we haven’t played as well as we should have in the World Cup. Right now, I think any decision taken right now will be emotional. We will go back and take some time and then make the required decision.”
The 32-year-old accepted responsibility for the team’s performance: “We will take full responsibility. Why not? We were involved in selecting the team and we were responsible for the players. I will take responsibility and I’m sure the coach will also take.”
‘Dummy captain’ accusation stirs press conference
A second reporter posed an even more provocative question, suggesting head coach Mike Hesson had reduced Agha to a figurehead. The journalist referenced Hesson’s public criticism of Babar Azam’s strike rate and his influence over selection and team strategy .
“The problem is that if I don’t answer this, you will take disrespect,” Agha responded, visibly agitated but maintaining dignity. “When a team is formed, it is a team game. It is not formed by one person’s decision. It is the result of the decisions of all stakeholders.”
Defending the controversial decision to demote Babar Azam to number four, Agha explained: “Babar had a different role in this World Cup. He was a number 4; he had better experience. We needed a batsman who could come in the middle order and provide stability and save us from collapse.”
Agha candidly identified the root cause of Pakistan’s recurring ICC tournament failures: an inability to handle pressure situations.
“You are absolutely right that we didn’t reach the semi-finals in the last four ICC tournaments. The reason is that we have to improve our game playing under pressure. When the pressure increases, how to improve our decision making? I think that matters more right now.”
He added: “If you see the entire tournament, we have under-performed. In the 20 over game, we played 18 overs very well, and the other team is allowed to play two overs well. But, yes our last three overs execution was not good. We are a better bowling unit than this. We were missing our execution.”
Also READ: Former Pakistan cricketers react after Men in Green knocked out of T20 World Cup 2026
PCB Chairman ‘unhappy’ – Major overhaul expected
Behind the scenes, PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi has reportedly made up his mind to remove Agha from T20 captaincy, regardless of the World Cup outcome. Multiple reports indicate Naqvi is “unhappy” after being assured by selectors and management that the team was primed for success .
A PCB source confirmed: “Naqvi is not happy at all because this time he was assured by the selectors, team management and his close aides in the board that the team was set to do well in the World Cup.”
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