Should Pakistan worry about Sarfaraz Ahmed's form?

His batting and keeping may have plummeted of late, but does his captaincy mean he’s still indispensable to Pakistan?

Danyal Rasool in Lahore04-Oct-2019On Wednesday at the National Stadium in Karachi, Sarfaraz Ahmed did something unusual, something he’d only done twice since he became ODI captain: he came in to bat at No. 4.To start with, he had said explicitly at the start of the series that he would bat at No. 5. The two occasions that necessitated him coming up the order in recent times occurred in the Asia Cup last year when Pakistan had lost two early wickets. Besides, Sarfaraz’s ostensible reticence to bat higher up the order has been an issue that’s bubbled away below the surface for over a year; even batting at five has been a recent phenomenon. Before May 2019, Sarfaraz had batted at that position just once in the past 35 ODIs, and higher on only the two aforementioned occasions.ALSO READ: ‘Said one thing, did another’ – Mickey Arthur on people he ‘trusted’ in Pakistan set-upIt was why the promotion to four for the third ODI was eyebrow-raising. He had elevated himself above Haris Sohail, who averages 46.11 in ODIs, and over 50 since the start of the year, and has shown form since being recalled midway through the World Cup. Pakistan had lost their second wicket at 181, and it wasn’t yet 30 overs.If it was an attempt to lay down a marker of the quirky, streetwise batting smarts Sarfaraz still feels Pakistan require, it would fall somewhat flat. The Pakistan captain scratched around for 23 off 33 balls, with just the one boundary coming off a spinner’s full-toss. Meanwhile, 43 runs had been added by the batsman at the other end, which, ironically, was Haris for much of Sarfaraz’s stay. In the end, Pakistan won comfortably, so the move escaped too much scrutiny.