Sat, 23 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 23, 2026 · 15:35
Sports World News Updated May 23, 2026

Pakistan's World Cup Rebuild: Hesson Backs Youth Ahead of Australia ODI Series

Pakistan head coach Mike Hesson has outlined a long-term vision for the ODI format, focusing on building squad depth ahead of the next ICC Men's Cricket World Cup. Hesson emphasized the need to widen the player pool rather than relying solely on established names, particularly with several first-choice batters unavailable. The upcoming home ODI series against Australia will serve as a testing ground for young players, with Hesson urging patience as they adjust to international cricket. He also expects a motivated Australian side, noting that ODI cricket remains one of their strongest formats.

Hesson begins Pakistan's World Cup rebuild, backs youth ahead of Australia ODI series

New Delhi, May 23

Pakistan head coach Mike Hesson has outlined the team's long-term vision for the ODI format, with the newly-appointed head coach insisting the team's focus is firmly fixed on building a deeper and more balanced squad ahead of the next ICC Men's Cricket World Cup.

As Pakistan prepare for their upcoming home ODI series against Australia national cricket team, Hesson made it clear that the selection strategy over the coming months will revolve around expanding the player pool rather than relying solely on established names.

"Look, I think with one-day cricket with the World Cup in mind, in a year and a half, you know, we have to widen the group. So rather than the same players always being selected, the ODI squad is a work in progress. And there's a number of areas we need to develop. And we need to make sure come the World Cup in a year and a half that we've actually got the best squad," Hesson said on the PCB Podcast

Pakistan's preparations have already begun through an intensive white-ball training camp organised by Hesson and his support staff, designed to evaluate both emerging players and senior members of the setup.

"The last two weeks have been a good chance for us to identify some of that new talent, challenge them against some of the existing stuff, or existing players, and work out where the gaps are, you know, because some of these young guys are promising, but, you know, still got a lot of work to do," said the the Pakistan head coach.

The upcoming Australia series is expected to serve as an important testing ground for several young players included in Pakistan's 16-member ODI squad, particularly with a few first-choice batters unavailable.

"With the likes of Fakir Zaman and Saim Ayub, Usman Khan all sort of being out, it gives some opportunities for us to look at some younger ones, particularly in the batting side," the former RCB coach opined.

Hesson also expects Australia to arrive highly motivated after Pakistan's dominant 3-0 T20I series win over them earlier this year as he said, "They'll be exposed to an Australian side who'll be hurting from their performance over here last time."

Despite Australia's setback in the shorter format, Hesson believes ODI cricket remains one of their strongest areas.

"Their squad looks strong and they'll be coming over here. ODI cricket is probably one of their stronger formats at the moment. That group is certainly probably better than their T20 at the moment," Hesson mentioned.

While excitement surrounds the inclusion of several young players, Hesson urged supporters to remain patient as the next generation adjusts to international cricket.

"I guess there needs to be a little bit of patience with some of these younger players because, sure, it would be great if they come in straight away and perform, but reality in international cricket is not everybody can do that," he said.

The Pakistan coach stressed that development and long-term growth remain central to the team's plans.

"Sometimes it takes a little bit of time to feel that you're confident enough to perform," he added.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Pooja D

As an Indian cricket fan, I have to say Pakistan's domestic structure has always been their weak link. Hesson is right to focus on widening the pool, but roping in young players without fixing grassroots issues might just be a band-aid solution. Still, credit to PCB for actually appointing a coach with a clear plan - something we could learn from!

Arjun K

Bhai, this is exactly what Pakistan needed! For years they've been relying on the same 2-3 players like Babar and Rizwan. Hesson's approach of giving chances to youngsters like Saim Ayub (even though he's out now) is smart. But yaar, patience is key - even Kohli took time to settle in ODIs. Let's see if Pakistan fans can wait that long 😄

Michael C

As an Aussie living in India, I can see Hesson's strategy making sense. Pakistan's T20I series win was impressive, but ODI cricket is a different beast - Australia's depth in that format is scary. Starc, Cummins, Hazlewood, and Smith/Marnus in full flow will test those youngsters big time. Pakistan needs to learn from how India built their bench strength over the last 5 years.

Naveen S

Hesson's comments remind me of what Rahul Dravid did for Indian cricket - building a system, not just a team. But honestly, Pakistan cricket has always been about raw talent, not systems. The real test will be when these youngsters face Australia's pace attack on those flat Pakistani pitches. Let's hope the board backs Hesson fully, otherwise this rebuild will be another false start. 🏏

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked