Full coverage of the PCB leadership crisis

Full coverage of the turmoil in the PCB administration involving Zaka Ashraf and Najam Sethi

ESPNcricinfo staff19-May-20142014August 18
News – Shaharyar Khan elected PCB chairman
August 16
News – Shaharyar Khan set to be elected PCB chairman
August 10
News – PCB chairman election to be held on August 18
August 6
News – PCB election ‘a matter of days’, says acting chairman
August 4
News – Former judge to oversee PCB polls
July 22
News – New PCB constitution retains chairman’s power
July 21
News – Supreme Court orders new PCB election
July 11
News – Sethi reinstated as PCB chairman by Supreme Court
July 10
News – Sethi removed as PCB chairman, Jamshed Ali Shah in interim role
News – Sethi’s removal could be temporaryMay 21
News – Sethi back as PCB chairman, two days after removal
May 20
News – Pakistan government appeals against Ashraf’s return
News – Arif Ali Abbasi appointed PCB chief consultant
May 19
News – Zaka Ashraf reinstated as PCB chairman again
May 17
News – Court order clears road for Zaka Ashraf return
May 14
News – Zaka Ashraf under PCB audit cloud
February 10
News – Zaka Ashraf out, Najam Sethi returns as PCB chairman
January 15
News – Zaka Ashraf reinstated as PCB chairman

December 17
News – High Court reserves judgement in PCB case
November 17
News – Misbah interview raises questions on Sethi’s role
November 4
News – Islamabad High Court reinstates Sethi, IMC temporarily
October 21
News – Court sets Nov 2 deadline for PCB election
October 15
News – PCB’s governing board dissolved
September 28
News – New PCB secretary appointed in compliance with HC order
July 24
News – PCB to appeal High Court judgement
July 20
News – Islamabad High Court orders fresh elections for PCB chairman
June 23
News – Najam Sethi named PCB’s interim chairman
June 19
News – PCB in turmoil after chairman’s suspension
June 13
News – Islamabad High Court upholds Zaka Ashraf suspension
May 28
News – High Court suspends Ashraf as PCB chairman
May 8
News – Zaka Ashraf is PCB’s first elected chairman

James Faulkner added to Test squad

Allrounder James Faulkner has been included in Australia’s Test squad for the two-match series against Pakistan in UAE

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Oct-2014Allrounder James Faulkner has been included in Australia’s Test squad for the two-match series against Pakistan in UAE. Faulkner is on standby for allrounder Mitchell Marsh, who has a hamstring strain.Marsh was a strong contender to fill the allrounder vacancy created by the injury to Shane Watson but he strained his hamstring while playing for Perth Scorchers in the Champions League T20 in India. Cricket Australia reported Marsh had resumed jogging and batting in the nets but there was uncertainty whether he would be able to bowl at full capacity in the build-up to the first Test, which begins on October 22 in Dubai. The other option for the allrounder’s spot is offspinner Glenn Maxwell.Faulkner’s inclusion was announced after Australia clinched the ODI series with a five-wicket win on Friday. Faulkner was part of the XIs that won the only Twenty international and the first two ODIs, and batted an No. 6 in all three games. He has played only one Test previously, at The Oval in 2013, when Australia lost the Ashes 3-0.Australia will play the third ODI against Pakistan on October 12 in Abu Dhabi, and then travel to Sharjah for a four-day game against Pakistan A from October 15.

Afcon 2021: Picking a Senegal-Egypt combined XI

Who would make a Dream Team of the two Nations Cup finalists?

BackpagePix.Goalkeeper: Edouard Mendy

Endured a tricky spell against Equatorial Guinea, but beyond that, has done little to dent his reputation as the finest African goalkeeper in the game.

Mendy has kept clean sheets in four matches, although he was breached in both the quarter-final and the semi.

AdvertisementBackpagepixRight-back: Omar Kamal

Squeezing out Bouna Sarr in the toughest decision of the lot, Kamal only made his full Egypt debut in the Pharaohs’ second group game, but has excelled defensively, averaging 3.6 tackles per match.

It’s not bad going for a player who made his name as a winger.

Getty ImagesCentre-back: Kalidou Koulibaly

Like Mendy, had a few nervous moments against Equatorial Guinea, but he remains one of Africa’s finest defenders of his generation and isn’t going to be squeezed out of this dream team by any of Egypt’s options.

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Getty ImagesCentre-back: Abdou Diallo

Left-back: Saliou CissMaking the team ahead of the likes of Ahmed Hegazy or Mohamed Abdelmonem, Diallo has taken to international football seamlessly after being coaxed away from a future with France.

He complements Koulibaly well, offering technical poise and composure, and also opened the scoring as Burkina Faso were defeated in the semi-finals.

'This could be the start of great things' – du Preez

Mignon du Preez, the South Africa captain, has called her side’s run to the Women’s World T20 semi-finals a “stepping stone” for women’s cricket in her country

Abhishek Purohit in Mirpur04-Apr-2014Mignon du Preez, the South Africa captain, has called her side’s run to the Women’s World T20 semi-finals a “stepping stone” for women’s cricket in her country. South Africa stunned favoured New Zealand in the group stage to make the semi-finals for the first time ahead of Suzie Bates’ team with a better net run-rate. Although they went down tamely to England in the semi-final, du Preez was proud of her side for their achievement.”Coming into this we were definitely underdogs. I think we have done exceptionally well and over the past few weeks the cricket that we have played, we have shown a lot of character and credit to the team,” du Preez said. “I am very proud of what we have done and I think this is like the stepping stone for women’s cricket in South Africa. It is nice to give something back to people who have been behind us all the way, whether you are winning or losing. I think this is going to open up the doors and be the start of great things for women’s cricket in South Africa.”South Africa lost only to Australia in Group A and beat New Zealand, Pakistan and Ireland. Along the way, they took inspiration from West Indies Women’s motto of ‘Moving in faith’ and said a prayer in the team huddle after their tournament ended against England this evening.West Indies have been probably the most improved side in women’s cricket in recent years, making the final of the World Cup in 2013 and the semi-final of this event.When asked if South Africa could be the new West Indies of women’s cricket, du Preez said she would not mind if her side was called that, as she admired Merissa Aguilleira’s side a lot. “They have come a long way over the last few years and they have played really good cricket,” she said. “They have played together as a team. Individuals do perform but they play really hard as a team. They are also underdogs but they play with a never-say-die attitude which I admire.”Du Preez did not think it was only England and Australia dominating women’s cricket and said South Africa’s run to the knockouts in this tournament proved that other sides were rapidly coming up the ranks.She pointed to the professionalisation of English women’s cricket and hoped that other countries would be able to do the same.

Kayes double ton puts South Zone on top

A maiden first-class double century from Imrul Kayes put South Zone in a commanding position at the end of day three

Mohammad Isam11-May-2014South Zone’s Imrul Kayes lit up a dull day in Mirpur with his maiden double-hundred in first-class cricket. His 204 pushed North Zone virtually out of the contest on the third day of the BCL final.South’s lead has now swelled to 446 runs, and they are in position to dictate terms, with seven wickets and two days remaining. They batted out the entire third day, making 410-3 with Imrul’s double and Mithun Ali’s eighth first-class hundred.Early morning rain delayed the start of play by 45 minutes, but it hardly deterred the South Zone openers. Anamul Haque fell after adding 57 for the first wicket, followed by an 80-run second wicket stand between Imrul and Soumya Sarkar, who made 41. The latter was needlessly run out in the 38th over, after Imrul called for a single and Soumya hesitated before he was caught well short of the crease at the striker’s end.Imrul batted with less patience than Mithun, who hardly put a foot wrong. The pair had to constantly tackle the in-form Taijul Islam and Sanjamul Islam, both left-arm spinners bowling in tandem in the afternoon session. Imrul smashed nine sixes and 20 fours in his stay at the crease, lasting one minute short of six hours, while Mithun struck 13 fours and five sixes in his unbeaten 111.The 254-run stand between Imrul and Mithun hardly had a glitch, except for Imrul popping half-chances close to short-leg, cover and long-on. The last of those didn’t make North Zone captain Nasir Hossain happy and he expressed himself quite loudly, with Imrul batting in the 190s at that point.Soon, Mithun reached his hundred with a cover-driven four and Imrul tucked the ball around the corner to reach his first double-hundred. His previous best score was 138. Imrul said he always had a dream to reach the milestone, and that his team’s dominance on the third day had taken them to a great position.”I am feeling really good,” Imrul told the media. “I had a target to score a double century for a while now. Actually, not being able to score a double-century in the current scenario, being a top order batsman, one isn’t able to get that acceptance so this was required. When another batsman scores a double hundred, it feels bad. I tell myself, ‘why can’t I do it?'”The match is completely in our hands. If we can bat for two sessions tomorrow we will give them the bat. We know that if we draw we will win the game.”Imrul’s dominance of Taijul looked risky at times, but he was always in control with his shots along the ground, even when he struck them straight to mid-on or mid-off. He struck five of his nine sixes off this left-arm spinner, never letting him settle for too long. He struck two sixes off Sanjamul and one each off Subashis Roy and Nasir Hossain.He explained that since the left-arm spinner was bowling with some flight, he took it upon himself to use his feet. “Actually I played to the situation,” Imrul said. “If he gave me flight, any batsman will automatically go down the wicket.”Taijul has been bowling well in the last year. There are many quality left-arm spinners so in four-day cricket if we get in an attacking mode and play him normally, we can easily negotiate him. First I saw that if a batsman stretches out to play him on the front foot it will be very dangerous for him. If you use your feet against him, it will be easier.”Taijul ended with figures of 1 for 109 off 27 overs while Farhad Reza took the wicket of Imrul late in the day, when the batsman hooked the ball straight to deep fine-leg.

India surge through impressive Ishant

The much-maligned Ishant Sharma continued to confound his critics by registering personal best of 6 for 51 to help bowl New Zealand out for 192

The Report by Sidharth Monga13-Feb-2014
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Crowe: Ishant was a revelation

The much-maligned Ishant Sharma continued to confound his critics by registering his personal best figures of 6 for 51 – also the best figures by an Indian quick not opening the bowling – to bowl New Zealand out for 192. Most crucial was his morning spell of 9-2-14-3 that helped India turn their morning around after the New Zealand openers had moved along to 23 without any incident. Despite New Zealand’s lower-order counterattack from 86 for 6, the Indian batsmen played stodgily to make sure that didn’t translate into any sort of momentum for the hosts.India had to contend with the misfortune of having dismissed Kane Williamson twice off no-balls before eventually getting him for 47, but spare a thought for Brendon McCullum too. He has been at the receiving end of MS Dhoni’s form at the toss, but this is where he needed Dhoni to call wrong more than ever. He had been delivered the green pitch he wanted, but he had to defend the series lead without the services of Ross Taylor who is away for his child’s birth.Dhoni, though, has now won 12 in a row in completed international matches. He has won every toss on this trip, but not a single match, and needed the best from his bowlers to correct that. They had the conditions to play with, which were even tougher than those on the first morning in Auckland. Almost every ball pitched up either swung or seamed or both. All you needed to do was bowl just short of half-volley length and watch the ball trouble the batsmen. Strangely, though, the bowler who flies in the face of such strategies began the slide for New Zealand.Hamish Rutherford, batting old-style in his new old-fashioned mo’, and Peter Fulton had negotiated seven overs without looking in trouble. In the eighth over came on Ishant, and he began to pitch short of a length. In his second, he bowled an accurate bouncer at Rutherford, who couldn’t get out of the way in time. Fulton reprised his trademark dismissal: neither forward nor back, and plumb in front. Out walked debutant Tom Latham. Eight balls later he had nicked Ishant off, scoring exactly as many as Taylor had in the first innings in Auckland.India’s strategy until then had been clear: Zaheer was doing the holding job, bowling eight tight overs in his first spell for 18 runs to facilitate attack from the other end. However, now we were getting into the crucial partnership between Williamson and McCullum, the duo that had rescued New Zealand from a similar start in Auckland. The two batted with similar purpose here, and Mohammed Shami soon replaced Zaheer.Ishant Sharma turned around another morning for India•Getty ImagesDespite a start here, McCullum soon found out his luck hadn’t changed much. He had added 19 with Williamson when he got a half-volley from Shami, but his manner of walking after hitting it in the air to mid-off suggested the ball still had time to stop in the pitch a little. Williamson, though, is going through a prolonged spell of good fortune. In Auckland, he was dropped pretty early. Here he got a beauty from Zaheer last ball before lunch, edged it, was caught, but discovered after TV replays that Zaheer had nothing behind the crease when he landed. Williamson was 15 then. By the time he reached 23, Corey Anderson was fallen for 24 trying to counterattack and BJ Watling for a duck. When he reached 23, Williamson nearly made it 87 for 7 when he bat-padded Ishant to short leg.Replays showed another act of over-stepping, Ishant had missed out on a sixth wicket, and New Zealand were on the cusp beginning a counterattack. The next 17.1 overs brought New Zealand 105 runs for four wickets. Williamson found freedom, debutant Jimmy Neesham struck 33 off 35, and Tim Southee struck three sixes in his run-a-ball 32. Southee carried that over into his bowling, dismissing M Vijay with a vicious incutter in his first over.Shikhar Dhawan and Cheteshwar Pujara, though, batted with discipline, and saw off the new ball. He covered Southee’s swing towards him well, left Trent Boult’s away swing alone, and swayed out of Neil Wagner’s bouncers. Once settled, Dhawan unfurled some sensational shots to run away with the initiative. His cuts from just outside off, the body arching away to make room, were almost outrageous. One particular over of Wagner, when he whipped, cut and upper-cut successive deliveries for four, four and six, would have been a small measure of retribution for that screamer from Wagner that turned the Auckland chase around. In all, Dhawan accelerated from 29 off 54 to 71 off 87.Just when it began to look easy for India, though, Boult came back and removed Pujara with a beautiful inswinger to suggest there was life in the pitch yet. However, the last act belonged, fittingly, to Ishant, who negotiated 16 awkward deliveries to protect Dhawan and Virat Kohli.

Aamer Sohail named Pakistan's chief selector

Former Pakistan batsman Aamer Sohail has been appointed the PCB’s director of game development, as well as chief selector

Umar Farooq04-Feb-2014Former Pakistan batsman and captain Aamer Sohail has been appointed the PCB’s director of game development, as well as chief selector. Mohammad Ilyas has been named the selector for junior and women teams.Pakistan have not had a full-time chairman of selectors since Iqbal Qasim decided to not renew his contract with the PCB in July 2013.Subsequently Moin Khan was named chief selector, only to be removed when the Islamabad High Court overruled all major decisions taken by interim PCB chairman Najam Sethi. The PCB had been functioning under an interim management committee for a large chunk of 2013 as a fallout of the court suspending Zaka Ashraf as board chairman in May; it ruled Ashraf’s election to be questionable. But then Ashraf was reinstated by the court as PCB chief in January.”This time I will be engaging all the stakeholders to take Pakistan cricket to the next level,” Sohail said at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore after his appointment. “I am thankful to the PCB and especially Zaka Ashraf who reposed his confidence in me and included me in his team.”The PCB has retained the previous members of the selection committee, including Azhar Khan, Saleem Jaffar and Farukh Zaman who will work under Sohail. Their next task is to pick the side for the upcoming Asia Cup in Bangladesh in the last week of February.”These (three) are the members who have been working in the past with the coach and captain and I will need their inputs,” Sohail said. “We will be meeting in next couple of days to discuss the selection (for the upcoming Asia Cup and World T20).Ashraf confirmed to ESPNcricinfo that Sohail’s appointment was one of the major changes approved by the PCB’s governing board on Monday. “We want to have an aggressive stance on filtration of talent from our domestic cricket and Aamer being an experienced contender is the best man to carry out our plan,” Ashraf said. “We have decided to rediscover the national academies with him at the helm with additional responsibility of national selection.”Sohail had held the same directorial post in Ijaz Butt’s regime in 2009, but quit because of the reported lack of freedom working on the post. However, Ashraf hinted at a full confidence in his scheme for the revival of national academies, where operations have been clamped down since 2009. Sohail also held the chief selector’s post just after the 2003 World Cup. That was the era where many a youngster was brought in to replace the generation of Wasim Akram, Saeed Anwar and Waqar Younis.”Coordination, I believe, is very important and all the stakeholders should be on one page and understand each other before taking decisions,” Sohail said. “I want logic to prevail.”Sohail said he has spent ample time with the outgoing coach Dav Whatmore and got his inputs before chalking out his plan. “I need to see what the captain is comfortable with because I need to see the comfort levels as well and can’t just impose my plan. So whatever I come up with will be after a coordinated effort.”

Ponting moves on from Monkeygate

Ricky Ponting, the former Australia captain, has buried the hatchet with the concerned players involved over the Monkeygate scandal of 2008, and has derided Cricket Australia over catering to the interests of the BCCI over the welfare of one of their play

Daniel Brettig22-Oct-2013Ricky Ponting, the former Australia captain, has drawn a firm line underneath the Monkeygate scandal of 2008, stating that he cleared any remaining tension with Sachin Tendulkar, Harbhajan Singh and Anil Kumble during his IPL stint with the Mumbai Indians this year.The Australian release of Ponting’s autobiography, , has exhumed the five-year-old wounds of the affair. Ponting’s ire was raised firmly in the direction of Cricket Australia for its compromises and collusion with the BCCI, but there has been some suggestion of lingering enmity between Ponting and the three central Indian players concerned.Kumble has said it is “important to move on” from events that did not cast any of its characters in a favourable light, while offering the rejoinder that “if you really want to know what happened, you have to wait for my book”. For his part, Ponting said his relationship with Tendulkar, Kumble and Harbhajan had been largely rehabilitated by sharing the Mumbai dressing room, pointing out that any real discord would have made his presence in the team untenable.”I had to captain Harbhajan and Sachin, and Anil was the mentor/coach. They wouldn’t have had me there if that (Monkeygate) hadn’t passed over,” Ponting told ESPNcricinfo. “And Anil hasn’t said anything about being angry or anything like that, it’s just about moving on and ‘wait until my book’.”I didn’t have any problem with them. Sachin was trying to look after his mate and changed his story a couple of times to suit. Harbhajan was the one there was a problem with, but we got to Mumbai, looked each other in the eye and shook hands and said we’ll make this work for the next couple of months. That’s well and truly gone.”What has not left Ponting is his discontent with how CA failed to support their players in a case that left the victim of abuse, Andrew Symonds, painted as a villain. Duly disillusioned, he drifted from the game via a series of disciplinary problems, a loss Ponting still felt angered by.”The worst of it all was the impact it had on Symmo (Symonds),” Ponting wrote. “I had tried to protect him from most of what was going on in the lead-up to the hearing, but when it was done I reckon it took the wind out of his sails. In many ways Symmo was gone from this moment on and it still makes me angry.”As maddening for Ponting were the political machinations around the appeal, with India’s threat to fly home given far more importance by CA than the defence of one of their own players. While engaged in many meetings during the Adelaide Test match that immediately preceded the appeal hearing in the South Australian capital’s Federal Court Building, he was unaware of numerous other events, including the sight of Tendulkar arriving on the morning of the appeal in the company of CA’s then chairman, Creagh O’Connor.

Ronchi pushes Neesham for Test spot

New Zealand are set to make at least one change to their team as they seek to level the series against Pakistan

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Nov-2014New Zealand are set to make at least one change to their batting line-up as they seek to level the Test series against Pakistan, but know that it will be a major challenge for whichever XI they send out to overcome the hosts in Sharjah.The draw in Dubai, where on the final day New Zealand had Pakistan nervous before tea, lifted confidence after the comprehensive reversal in the opening Test. However, breaking down the performance there were at least a couple of moments when more ruthlessness could have brought even greater rewards.They had been 226 for 2 in the first innings, but ended up needing their lower-order’s help to scrape past 400. Then they had Pakistan 312 for 9 in their first innings before a last-wicket stand of 81 between Sarfraz Ahmed and Rahat Ali brought the scores almost level.Both in terms of runs and time used up, that was a vital period and the difference between New Zealand having an even stronger chance to force a result on the final day – and it needed Ross Taylor’s impressive hundred to prevent a likely Pakistan victory.In the middle order, Jimmy Neesham, despite being the first New Zealander to score hundreds in his first two Tests, has emerged as the most vulnerable after a lean two Tests where he has struggled against spin. So too, has Corey Anderson but he was more robust in the first Test and his bowling is a notch more threatening than Neesham’s, whose one wicket in the series was a long hop smashed to cover by Younis Khan.”We’ll definitely consider changes,” Mike Hesson, the New Zealand coach, said. “We considered it before this [second] Test and we had some good discussions over the make-up of the side and we’ll continue those.”Luke Ronchi is shaping as the man to push for inclusion, partly due to his recent strong form in ODIs, with scores of 99 and 79 against South Africa, but also as he is a right-hander and that is viewed as a way of being able to counter threat posed by Zulfiqar Babar and Yasir Shah, who have targeted the pads and stumps of the left-handers with deliveries spinning into them.However, one change in batting personnel is unlikely to quell the threat posed by the Pakistan spinners, especially on a surface that is already shorn of any semblance of grass two days out from the match.”In the other two pitches we could see grass, but not here. This looks a bit different. Sharjah traditionally is lower and skiddier and slows up as the game goes on. So I don’t expect this wicket to be any different,” Hesson said. “The warm-up game we had played here had lot more grass on it. We have to play very well to be able to compete in these conditions.”Their bowling attack is likely to be bolstered with the surprise inclusion of Daniel Vettori, who was already with the New Zealand A team in the UAE, taking the spinners’ count to three in the team. Ish Sodhi, the legspinner, has impressed in patches but the Pakistan batsmen have made a conscious effort to attack offspinner Mark Craig whose Test economy rate is over four an over.”Our spinners aren’t used to bowling on conditions where footholes play such a part. Pakistan spinners beat us off the wicket and at home traditionally we try and beat guys in the air,” Hesson said. “When you have footholes to hit, it’s very hard to change the method that you’ve trained your whole life. I thought the way Ish and Mark have adapted over the last couple of Tests is pleasing but they are still striving for consistency of pace as well.”

ECB secures Royal London deal

The ECB has secured a major new sponsorship deal with the news that Royal London will become the chief sponsor of one-day cricket at international, county and recreational levels from 2014.

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Nov-2013The ECB has secured a major new sponsorship deal with the news that Royal London, the mutual life and pensions company, will become the chief sponsor of all one-day cricket at international, county and recreational levels from 2014.The announcement ends months of uncertainty about the securing of sponsorship for the 50-over game, especially at county level where it has been overshadowed by a relaunched Twenty20 tournament which will be played predominantly on Friday nights next season as a summer-long tournament.The ECB has been committed to simplifying its sponsorship structure in one-day cricket. That has now been achieved, with Royal London sponsoring England’s ODIs for men and women over the next four years; the county competition, which reverts from 40 to 50 overs next season; and a national club championship in which the top 256 clubs in the ECB’s official leagues will be invited to partake.There will also be a series of Royal London Junior County Cups, county-based, for boys and girls, from U-13 to U-17 levels.David Collier, the ECB’s chief executive, said: “Our commercial and broadcast deals provide the foundation and long-term stability for our investment in cricket from the playground to Test arena, and this deal is further proof of cricket’s popularity in England and Wales.”The public’s appetite for one-day cricket remains extremely high with international sell-outs every summer and the recent success of the ICC Champions Trophy is also testament to the format’s strength.”The deal signals the end of a relationship stretching back to 2005 with the previous county one-day sponsors, Yorkshire Bank and Clydesdale Bank.NatWest, which has been a major partner for one-day international cricket since 2000, will continue as the sponsor of all T20 cricket in England. Test cricket is backed by Investec and LV= sponsors the County Championship.

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