Pakistan warn England’s flaky batting to expect a trial by spin

England's Phil Salt walks back to the pavilion after his dismissal during the 2026 ICC Men's T20 Cricket World Cup Super Eights match between Sri Lanka and England at Pallekele International Cricket Stadium in Kandy on February 22, 2026. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 23 February 2026
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Pakistan warn England’s flaky batting to expect a trial by spin

  • Pakistan desperately need a win after their first match against New Zealand was washed out
  • A defeat would put England, who skittled Sri Lanka, through to the semis with a game to spare

Pallekele: Pakistan on Monday warned England’s inconsistent batting line-up to expect a trial by spin when the teams clash in the T20 World Cup Super Eights.

Pakistan batsman Sahibzada Farhan told reporters that England struggled to 146-9 against Sri Lanka’s spinners on Sunday.

Farhan said that England can expect more of the same from Pakistan’s spinners when they meet on the same Pallekele ground in Kandy on Tuesday night.

Pakistan desperately need a win after their first match against New Zealand was washed out.

A defeat would put England, who skittled Sri Lanka for 95 to win by 51 runs, through to the semifinals with a game to spare.

Pakistan would then need to beat Sri Lanka in their final Super Eights match and hope other results go their way to reach the last four.

“What we saw in the Sri Lanka-England game was that the ball was gripping and England struggled against spin,” said the in-form opener Farhan on Monday.

“Sri Lanka have one or two spinners but we have five in all so we will give England a tough time on a pitch that looks good and will grip,” said Farhan.

Pakistan’s spinners have taken 26 wickets in the four matches so far. Their seamers have dismissed only seven batsmen.

History will be against Pakistan as they have never beaten England in three previous Twenty20 World Cup clashes.

“We are confident and our morale is high,” said Farhan, who scored an unbeaten 100 against Namibia in Pakistan’s final group match.

“We are focused on this match to win and progress.”

Farhan, who tops the T20 World Cup run-scoring chart with 220, said he was ready for the threat of England’s express pace bowler Jofra Archer.

“Facing Archer will not be difficult because I have faced similar bowlers in Pakistan,” said Farhan.

“So if he has plans against me, I also have plans against him.”

Pakistan are likely to bring in spinner Abrar Ahmed in place of seaming all-rounder Faheem Ashraf.

England may name an unchanged side for the fifth match in succession with Liam Dawson, Will Jacks, Adil Rashid and Jacob Bethell providing their spin options.

Sri Lanka and New Zealand are the two other teams in Pakistan and England’s Super Eights group. They face each other in Colombo on Wednesday.

The top two teams will qualify for the semifinals.


From sponsor to enemy: What’s behind latest conflict between Pakistan and Afghanistan?

Updated 3 min 21 sec ago
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From sponsor to enemy: What’s behind latest conflict between Pakistan and Afghanistan?

  • Once close to Afghan Taliban, Islamabad now accuses them of harboring anti-Pakistan militants, which Kabul denies
  • Afghan ⁠Taliban say Pakistan harbors fighters from its enemy, the Daesh group, a charge Islamabad denies

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has been ‌the Afghan Taliban’s closest friend for decades. It was Islamabad that helped give birth to the Taliban in the early 1990s – as a way to give Pakistan “strategic depth” in its rivalry with India. What’s gone wrong?

Pakistan carried out air strikes on Afghanistan’s major cities overnight, officials in ​Islamabad and Kabul said on Friday, escalating months of border clashes between the Islamic neighbors. The air and ground strikes, which hit Taliban military posts, headquarters and ammunition depots in multiple sectors along the border, came after Afghanistan launched an attack on Pakistani border forces, the officials said.

Both sides reported heavy losses in the fighting, which Pakistan’s defense minister said amounted to an “open war.”

Tensions have been heating up since Pakistan launched air strikes on militant targets in Afghanistan last weekend.

Earlier, border clashes between the two countries killed dozens of soldiers in October until negotiations facilitated by Turkiye, Qatar and Saudi Arabia ceased the hostilities and a fragile ceasefire was put in place.

The escalating conflict is a long way from Islamabad’s historic support for the ‌Taliban. The key ‌questions:

WHY ARE THE NEIGHBOURS NOW AT ODDS?

Pakistan welcomed the return to power ​of ‌the ⁠Taliban in 2021, ​with ⁠then-Prime Minister Imran Khan saying that Afghans had “broken the shackles of slavery.”

But Islamabad soon found that the Taliban were not as cooperative as it had hoped. Islamabad says that the leadership of militant group Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and many of its fighters are based in Afghanistan, and that armed insurgents seeking independence for the southwestern Pakistani province of Balochistan also use Afghanistan as a safe haven.

Militancy has increased every year since 2022 with attacks by the TTP and Baloch insurgents growing, according to Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, a global monitoring organization.

Kabul for its part has repeatedly denied allowing militants to use Afghan territory to launch attacks in Pakistan.

The Afghan ⁠Taliban say Pakistan harbors fighters from its enemy, the Daesh group, a charge Islamabad denies.

Islamabad ‌says the ceasefire did not hold long due to continued militant attacks in ‌Pakistan from Afghanistan, and there have been repeated clashes and border closures ​since then that have disrupted trade and movement along the ‌rugged frontier.

WHAT SPARKED THE LATEST CLASHES?

The day before last weekend’s strikes, Pakistani security sources said they had “irrefutable evidence” that militants ‌in Afghanistan were behind a recent wave of attacks and suicide bombings which targeted Pakistani military and police.

The sources listed seven planned or successful attacks by militants since late 2024 that they said were connected to Afghanistan. One attack last week that killed 11 security personnel and two civilians in Bajaur district was undertaken by an Afghan national, according to Pakistani security sources. This attack was claimed by the TTP.

WHO ‌ARE THE PAKISTANI TALIBAN?

The TTP was formed in 2007 by several militant outfits active in northwest Pakistan. It is commonly known as the Pakistani Taliban. The TTP has attacked ⁠markets, mosques, airports, military bases, police ⁠stations and also gained territory — mostly along the border with Afghanistan, but also deep inside Pakistan, including the Swat Valley. The group was behind the 2012 attack on then schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, who received the Nobel Peace Prize two years later.

The TTP also fought alongside the Afghan Taliban against US-led forces in Afghanistan and hosted Afghan fighters in Pakistan. Pakistan has launched military operations against the TTP on its own soil with limited success, although an offensive that ended in 2016 drastically reduced attacks till a few years ago.

WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN NEXT?

Pakistan is likely to intensify its military campaign, analysts say, while Kabul’s retaliation could come in the way of raids on border posts and more cross-border guerrilla attacks to target security forces.

On paper, there is a wide mismatch between the military capabilities of two sides. At 172,000, the Taliban have less than a third of Pakistan’s personnel.

The Taliban do possess at least six aircraft and 23 helicopters but their condition is unknown and ​they have no fighter jets or effective air force.

Pakistan’s ​armed forces include more than 600,000 active personnel, have more than 6,000 armored fighting vehicles and more than 400 combat aircraft, according to 2025 data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies. The country is also nuclear armed.