Exclusive | Rashid Latif on Pakistan boycotting India match: ‘In 24 hours, anything is possible'
Latif links the escalation to Bangladesh’s removal from the tournament, the shifting political climate in South Asia, and the enormous financial stakes attached to India-Pakistan cricket.
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“Till now, everything was going well. Pakistan and India both agreed that we would play in a hybrid model for the next three years. The Asia Cup happened in Dubai. Pakistan’s women’s team played in Sri Lanka in the Women’s ODI World Cup. Everything was going well, but things have changed since the Bangladesh episode happened,” says Latif from Islamabad.
“Pakistan is standing with Bangladesh. It was not like this in the past,” Latif says.
Whether it is in India or Pakistan, 60–70 percent of people watch the World Cup because of India-Pakistan matches.
Despite Pakistan’s recent struggles on the field, Latif argues that their importance to global cricket remains undiminished. India-Pakistan matches, he says, are the engine that drives World Cup viewership.
“Whether it is in India or Pakistan, 60–70 percent of people watch the World Cup because of India-Pakistan matches,” he says.
Latif points out that even matches involving Australia draw packed stadiums, but when India and Pakistan are both involved, the scale is unmatched. Viewership runs into the millions, sponsorship valuations spike, and broadcasters plan entire commercial strategies around these fixtures.
In case Pakistan do not take the field against India on February 15, they will lose two points, and there could be sanctions from the ICC as well.
Latif claims that Pakistan’s move is not aimed at India directly, but at the ICC itself.
“This decision is not on India. It is hitting the ICC directly,” he says.
Pakistan generally don’t take such decisions. The PCB is not even scared of sanctions. It will have a big impact.
“Pakistan generally don’t take such decisions. The PCB is not even scared of sanctions. It will have a big impact. There is a Women’s T20 World Cup in England this year, and Pakistan might play India there as well. Then there is a Champions Trophy in 2028, hosted by India. So this will not end here. It seems that Pakistan has taken this step after a lot of thought,” he says.
Latif dismissed the idea that Pakistan is worried about sanctions. He says that if Bangladesh had acted alone, punitive measures might have followed. With Pakistan involved, the equation changes dramatically.
“Now that Pakistan has joined, it will impact Australia and England financially as well,” he explains.
The ripple effect would not stop at one tournament. The ACC calendar, future Asia Cups, and even ICC events would feel the strain. Latif estimates the India-Pakistan cricket economy as a billion-dollar business across formats and tournaments.
“The businessmen are above our governments,” he says bluntly. “Now the game has gone out of their hands.”
Latif places significant faith in the power of broadcasters. He believes they will not allow a prolonged standoff that threatens their investments.
“You know how powerful broadcasters are. They will find some solution,” he says.
There is always backdoor diplomacy. In 24 hours, anything is possible.
Drawing parallels with how previous Asia Cup deadlocks were resolved, Latif suggests similar behind-the-scenes negotiations are inevitable for the World Cup. Without compromise, he warns, the consequences could be disastrous for world cricket.
“If not, then it is a disaster for world cricket,” he adds.
Teams opting not to play matches is not unprecedented in ICC tournaments. At the 1996 World Cup, Australia and the West Indies declined to travel to Sri Lanka over security concerns. In the 2003 edition, England refused to face Zimbabwe for political reasons, while New Zealand did not travel to Nairobi for their group match against Kenya.
However, Latif does not rule out a reversal of stance. “There is always backdoor diplomacy,” he says.
With Pakistan taking nearly a week to arrive at this position, Latif believes the timing has been carefully calculated. The Australia series has just ended, both teams are set to travel to Colombo, and the spotlight is firmly on the ICC.
“In 24 hours, anything is possible,” he concludes.
Get the latest ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 updates, including the full schedule, teams, live scores, points table, and key series stats such as top run-scorers and wicket-takers.
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