There are 93 days left until the 2026 Pakistan Super League (PSL 11). Normally, by this point in the cycle, fans are arguing over retention lists, mock‑drafting squads, and fighting about which overseas star will skip which league. This year? Everything about the PSL 11 can be summed up in two words: “Coming Soon.”
The window for PSL 11 is locked in, from 26 March to 3 May, and the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has proudly announced that the league is expanding to eight teams. Foreign player registration has opened. Beyond that, the concrete information starts to thin out very quickly.
Right now, the PSL 11 to‑do list reads like this:
The backbone of the draft, how many players sit in Platinum, Diamond, Gold, and so on, hasn’t been officially refreshed. With inflation, currency issues, and an expanded league, this isn’t a small detail; it decides who can afford whom.
Teams don’t yet know how many players they can actually keep. Five? Eight? Ten? Until that cap is announced, every franchise is building a strategy on sand.
No date, no lists, no social‑media reveal videos. For a league that usually lives off hype, this silence is deafening.
All we have are hints about “early January” in Lahore. Nothing locked in, nothing on the calendar, nothing fans can circle. At this pace, nobody would blink if the draft quietly slipped into February – or worse, into the same month the league starts.
The auction for the seventh and eighth teams is scheduled for early January, which means we still don’t officially know the new cities, owners, names, logos, or colors. An eight‑team league is three months away, and a quarter of the grid technically doesn’t exist yet.
Everyone knows there will be more matches, but the exact structure, straight double round‑robin, some kind of Super stage, how many games per team, has not been formally laid out.
With PSL now in a March–May window that overlaps early county cricket and other commitments, there is still no clear picture of which English regulars are likely to be available for full seasons, part seasons, or not at all.
Add to that the usual unanswered questions, full schedule, venue split, ticketing plan, opening‑ceremony details, and even clarity on one existing franchise’s ownership situation, and PSL 11 currently feels less like a polished product and more like a very ambitious Google Doc.
The expansion to eight teams and the shift to a longer window should have made PSL 11 the most eagerly anticipated edition yet. Instead, with 93 days to go, it is shaping up as a test of how late you can leave everything and still pull off a professional T20 league.
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