
Key Points
Fakhar's knee injury compromised Pakistan's batting strategy
Hafeez questions Babar Azam's batting approach
Management's decision cost team critical match
Champions Trophy defence severely impacted
Fakhar sustained a knee injury during the first over into Pakistan's opener against New Zealand while chasing the ball in the outfield, forcing him to leave the field. Though he returned during Pakistan's chase, The ICC regulations prevented him from opening the batting for Pakistan. Instead, he was sent in at No. 4, a decision Hafeez believes was a major miscalculation.
"You give the Champions Trophy to the guy who sent Fakhar to bat at No. 4. He couldn't run properly. It was a long match, and he was in pain. You can't expect him to just stand there and hit every ball out of the park. He was struggling with running between the wickets, which added more pressure on Babar Azam," Hafeez said on PTV Sports.
Beyond Fakhar's injury, Hafeez also raised concerns over Babar's approach during Pakistan's 60-run defeat. The Pakistan captain scored 64 off 90 balls but failed to accelerate when required.
"Babar is a top player. He has nearly 18,000 to 20,000 international runs, but what was his intent today?" Hafeez questioned. "He scored a fifty and seemed satisfied, but Pakistan lost the game. If his knock had taken the game forward, then it would have been valuable. Instead, his half-century cost Pakistan the match. Why didn't we start batting with that intent in the powerplay?" he added.
Pakistan's title defence at home had already been dealt when Saim Ayub was ruled out of the tournament after he twisted his ankle during the Test series in South Africa.