Look at where that places him against others who have played a minimum of 35 innings in between World Cups and against the same opponents. Only five players average less than him, and of those, four are legitimately allrounders and so contribute elsewhere. Malik has not been an allrounder since he became captain, in 2007.The much simpler thing to do would have been to look at his ODI record in England, which is astonishing. Before this World Cup, Malik was averaging 14.60 in England. That is not a small sample size, where one poor series can have an outsize impact; it is built over 16 years and 25 ODIs, in ICC events, in bilateral series, on old England pitches and new England pitches. There are 11 single-figure scores in there, including three ducks. That’s the 8, 0 and 0 in this World Cup.

Maybe they do know these numbers. And maybe hard, cold numbers are not important to them, or not as important as seniority and experience. Those are the only reasons Pakistan have given privately and publicly for his continued selection here. Experience. Calm. Wise. It sounds less like a player and more like the tagline for some new Apple gadget.Also, that sounds like a tacit admission that Sarfaraz Ahmed, 110 ODIs in, a captain at every level since since his U-19 days, is not a leader enough. Or that Mohammad Hafeez — 200-plus ODIs like Malik — is not enough of a guiding hand.ALSO READ: Do Mohammad Amir and Shoaib Malik fit into Pakistan’s World Cup squad?These are, in any case, Malik’s final days in 50-over cricket. He will leave behind an absolute of a 20-year career, best navigated through a series of what-ifs. What if his action hadn’t been reported early in his career, or if he had fixed it enough to keep thinking of himself a bowler? What if he had continued at one or two-down in Pakistan’s ODI batting order, where Bob Woolmer thought he was best used? What if — and none is as important as this — Pakistan hadn’t made him captain in 2007? Hadn’t pulled him into leading a team undergoing full-scale implosion, in a country undergoing a full-scale implosion?What if Pakistan was not genetically beholden to seniority and had not gone back to him in 2015? What if they had shown more faith in, say, Mohammad Rizwan? What if they believed — as they currently don’t — that Asif Ali could bat six? What if they convinced Hafeez to play at five or six instead? What if Sarfaraz Ahmed had shown a little more self-belief and become the number five himself?So many what-ifs, and now, so little point.

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