Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Shaharyar Khan has slammed the team's performance at the Asia Cup but admitted it was too late to make sweeping changes ahead of the World Twenty20 this month. The 2009 World Twenty20 champion lost to arch-rival India and host Bangladesh, and only managed to beat United Arab Emirates, raising serious doubts about its potential to challenge for the title in the March 8-April 3 tournament. Shaharyar said everyone from the coach to those involved in the selection process would be held accountable but added there would not be no knee-jerk reaction. "It wasn't just a matter of disappointment but it was a painful experience to watch Pakistan play like that," Shaharyar told reporters in Lahore. "The performance was very poor, other then a few individuals' performances, but I can assure that accountability is inevitable and whoever is responsible has to answer. "Changes are important in the electoral process and leadership but we have to sit and think wisely." The PCB chairman, who has emphasized the importance of conditioning in the shortest format of the game, said at least three to four players in Shahid Afridi's team appeared unfit. While the pace attack was impressive in the tournament, Pakistan's batting let them down. They were bundled out for 83 against India and managed 129-7 against Bangladesh which saw them miss out on a place in Sunday's final. "We will bring changes in selection process, coaching process and leadership process," Shaharyar said, adding that he had already sought advice from senior Test batsmen Younis Khan and Misbahul Haq. Pakistan added fast bowler Mohammad Sami and batsman Sharjeel Khan to its original squad for the World T20 following injuries to Babar Azam and Rumman Raes but the PCB chairman did not rule out further changes. Afridi has also come under intense scrutiny due to his failures with the bat but Shaharyar said the 36-year-old all-rounder would captain the side in India. "I understand there is a lot of criticism but I am not going to change anything one week before the major tournament in India," Shaharyar said. "Afridi will remain captain unless he himself pulls out of the job. He has been serving Pakistan from the last 15 years. "Some changes you will see will be done before we play our first matches in World T20 and other important changes will be done after the tournament." Bowlers beware Batsmen will be encouraged to satisfy contemporary cricket's seemingly insatiable lust for boundaries and bowlers reduced to mere cannon fodder when the sixth World Twenty20 gets underway in India Tuesday. With 35 matches spread over 27 days, starting with eight "minnows" battling it out for two spots in the Super 10 round, the tournament looks set to illustrate once again just how skewed the 20-overs game is against bowlers. There is more chance of discovering life on Mars than in the docile Indian tracks, which will be rolled out for a tournament that concludes with the April 3 final at Kolkata's Eden Gardens. While cricket purists may look on it with disdain, there is a growing acceptance that the format is the only way the game can expand beyond its current stagnation in former British colonies. The International Cricket Council (ICC) last month received a status report on its ongoing dialogue over the game's possible inclusion at Olympics and Commonwealth Games. Like rugby sevens before it, there seems little doubt that cricket's best hope of being given a place at such international multi-sport events is to push the shorter form of the game. — Agencies