
Created at Nov 13, 2025 04:12 PM
Background & the scheduled tournament
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) initially scheduled a three-nation T20 international (T20I) tri-series in Pakistan from 17–29 November 2025. The event was planned as preparation for the forthcoming ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 in India and Sri Lanka.
The initial participants were Pakistan (hosts) and the Sri Lanka national cricket team, with Afghanistan.
The revised fixture list contains the inaugural match on 17 November between Zimbabwe and Pakistan at Rawalpindi, then Sri Lanka vs Zimbabwe on 19 Nov, then matches in Lahore (Gaddafi Stadium) with a final on 29 Nov.
Afghanistan’s withdrawal
On 18 October 2025, the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) stated that the Afghan national team would be not playing in the tri-series.
Reason cited
The decision came in the wake of a tragic incident: According to the ACB, three young Afghan cricketers—named Kabeer Agha, Sibghatullah and Haroon—along with other civilians were killed in an air-strike in Paktika province’s Urgun district in Afghanistan, following a friendly match they had played in Sharana.
The ACB described the strike a “cowardly act” and declared it a “loss” for Afghanistan’s sporting community and cricketing fraternity. They stated they were pulling out of the tri-series “as a gesture of respect to the victims.”
Wider implications
The attack forms part of greater cross-border relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Pakistani military incursions in border areas, the presence of Afghan Taliban and affiliated groups, and affiliated militant groups form part of a complicated regional security landscape. The response of the ACB is symptomatic of how geopolitics and security may affect sport.
The international governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC), released a statement that deplored the attack, an expression of solidarity with the ACB.
From a cricketing relations perspective, the pull-out puts pressure: Pakistan and Afghanistan have had rows in the past few years, most notably on match scheduling, hosting, and security issues.
Zimbabwe fills the gap
With Afghanistan out, the PCB moved to make sure the integrity of the tri-series was preserved and that it would proceed.
On 18 October the board released a statement that Zimbabwe had agreed to take Afghanistan’s place in the tournament.
Tournament schedule with new line-up
With Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe part of the tri-series now, the schedule is:
17 Nov: Pakistan vs Zimbabwe — Rawalpindi
19 Nov: Sri Lanka vs Zimbabwe — Rawalpindi
Then the matches move to Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium for the rest of the group matches and final on 29 Nov.
Importance for Zimbabwe
For Zimbabwe, this presents a significant chance: participation in a high-profile tri-nation tournament held in Pakistan, which can improve the side’s visibility in T20Is and preparedness before the T20 World Cup cycle.
PCB’s viewpoint
The PCB asserted that the tournament “will go ahead as planned” in spite of the pull-out and has made it clear that the tri-series is on with the new team line-up.
Why it matters beyond cricket
Security and geopolitics encroaching into sport
The sequence of events highlights the way security incidents and geopolitical matters can carry over into sport. The loss of the Afghan players, and the ACB’s withdrawal, illustrate that cricket cannot always be segregated from the broader political and security environment.
Reputation & organisational challenges
For Pakistan, staging international tours and tri-series is central to reviving domestic interest and cricketing relations. The Afghan withdrawal is a loss, but the inclusion of Zimbabwe soon after helps counter it.
For Afghanistan, the incident and withdrawal can produce diplomatic, sporting and reputational ripples: how the ACB handles the fallout, whether cricket tours are affected, and its relationship with the PCB and ICC will all be important.
Preparation for T20 World Cup
The tri-series was specifically presented as preparation for the 2026 T20 World Cup. With Zimbabwe in the mix now, things are different—different match-ups, perhaps different strategies and levels of readiness. All three teams will need to look to use the series to get going.
Fans & stakeholders
For Pakistani and Sri Lankan fans, and for sponsors/broadcasters, the switch of teams could change interest levels or storylines. For Afghan fans, the withdrawal will be disappointing. For Zimbabwe, the chance is a welcome one.
Questions pending & next steps
Will Afghanistan try to reschedule or join another Pakistan or other series? Will the ACB/PCB discuss?
How will the event that precipitated the withdrawal (air-strike fatalities) be handled in wider diplomatic/ sporting circles?
How will Zimbabwe go in this tri-series? Will their participation alter the competitive dynamic?
Will the series go off without a hitch for all encounters (Rawalpindi + Lahore) with regard to logistics, security and broadcasting?
Following this tri-series, how will each of the teams (Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe) go in the lead-in to the T20 World Cup?
In short: the initially scheduled tri-series among Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan now has been revised due to Afghanistan’s withdrawal in light of a tragic border-strike accident. Zimbabwe has come in to fill the gap to allow the tournament to proceed. Aside from the cricketing arrangements, this incident brings out the convergence of sport with security, geopolitics and inter-board affairs.