Pakistan skipper Shahid Afridi will go back home before deciding whether to retire from international cricket after his team lost to Australia and was eliminated from the World Twenty20 Friday. Australia beat Pakistan by 21 runs in Mohali and Afridi, who had hinted before the game that retirement was imminent, said he has not yet made a final decision to call it quits. "I'm going to go back home and in the next four-five days I will take a decision and whatever is better for the country, I will go with that. I think I will announce this in my country," the 36-year-old told reporters. "As a player I'm fine but as a captain I'm not fit because it's not easy to handle the pressure, especially if you are playing for Pakistan ... the expectation pressure, the media pressure, everything." Afridi, whose team lost three of its four games to finish behind archrival India, Australia and New Zealand in Group Two, found few positives in Pakistan's performance. Australia skipper Steven Smith guiding his team to 193-4 with an unbeaten 63 and James Faulkner took five wickets to send Pakistan out. "I think honestly speaking we were not good enough," Afridi said. "I think we didn't play good cricket and if you look at the bowlers they've really done well but, later on, in the last four overs, we gave 40 runs so it's not good enough if you're playing against a world-class team." Australia, chasing an elusive first World Twenty20 title and level on four points with India, faces the host nation in Mohali Sunday in a game that will decide its fate. Former Pakistani skipper Rameez Raja also said that retirement was a tough decision and Afridi should be given time to ponder over it. "It would be a difficult decision for Afridi, because he has a fan following. He should go home and decided that to call it a day and exit gracefully because he is such a great cricketer and all rounder," Raja said.