Despite producing world-class cricketers, hockey players and squash champions in 68 years since independence, Pakistan's Olympic medal tally is an imperfect 10 -- eight in field hockey and only two individual.
The Olympics in Brazil mark the lowest ebb for Pakistan as they failed to qualify in field hockey for the first time since their maiden appearance in 1948 London Games.
Three athletes -- shooters Ghulam Mustafa Bashir and Minhal Sohail, and judoka Shah Hussain, qualified by right on the "continental quota" after racking up reasonable records in various international competitions.
It is a far cry from the sporting glory the country once enjoyed. As recently as 1994, Pakistan held world titles in field hockey, amateur snooker, squash and cricket. But only hockey is an Olympic sport.
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Pakistan's various sports federations are not awash with cash, but neither are they starved of funds to an extent that could explain the country's abysmal performances.
Funds are awarded haphazardly, with patronage-based hiring and inflated wages of officials swallowing significant chunks and leaving individual sports federations baffled and angry.
"Funds not reaching deserving athletes and to the sport which has the potential of winning a medal is the most unfortunate thing," said Ehsan Qureshi, a seasoned sports journalist.
Iqbal Hussain, head of the country's boxing federation, says his organisation was awarded a mere $3,000 for the qualifiers, down from $300,000 in 2012.
The biggest slump has come in hockey -- where Pakistan
can boast three golds in 1960, 1968 and 1984, but their last medal was a bronze at Barcelona in 1992.
They finished a poor eighth in 2008 and seventh four years later. The malaise worsened as Pakistan failed to qualify for the World Cup in 2014 and then missed out on qualifying for Rio.
"It's a big setback that our field hockey team will be missing for the first time," said Pakistan Olympic Association president Arif Hassan.
"Today Pakistan team is out of the Olympics, we have won three Olympics and four world titles... That's disappointing and we are to blame ourselves for this."
But there remains a glimmer of hope. Pakistan's best chance of a medal is Shah Hussain Shah, a judoka who won Silver at the Commonwealth Games in 2014 and whose father Hussain Shah won Bronze as a boxer in the Seoul Games in 1988.
"I have trained hard in Japan and it's my aim to emulate my father's win," said Shah, who lives and trains in Tokyo.