Yousuf to meet Pakistan board chairman

There is good news for Pakistan cricket now that Mohammad Yousuf has agreed to talk about his future with the board © AFP

Mohammad Yousuf will be meeting Nasim Ashraf, chairman of the Pakistan board, this week in Lahore to discuss his future with Pakistan cricket as well his decision to join the Indian Cricket League (ICL).”No agenda has been finalised for this meeting,” Shafqat Naghmi, PCB’s chief operating officer, said. “But since Yousuf is a very important member of the team, the chairman will try to persuade him to give Pakistan top priority.”Yousuf, together with Inzamam-ul-Haq, Imran Farhat and Abdul Razzaq, joined the ICL after being overlooked for the ICC World Twenty20. The PCB, in a similar manner to some other boards, has threatened to place life bans on players joining the unofficial Indian league.Yousuf, however, has not made any immediate plans and is waiting to see the results of his meeting with Ashraf. “Obviously, Pakistan is my first priority,” he said. “But I need to know how things can be worked out without any inconvenience to anyone.”While the PCB has been trying to lure Yousuf back into national reckoning, no such move has been made for Inzamam, Farhat or Razzaq prompting rumours that their international careers might very well be over.Pakistan play host to South Africa in a two-Test and five-ODI series starting next month.

Australia secure 4-0 lead with 85-run success

Leah Poulton continued her strong series with 68 to follow her century in game three © Getty Images

Australia continued their unbeaten streak in the Rose Bowl Series with an 85-run victory that took them to a 4-0 advantage. The home side’s 9 for 252 proved too great a target for New Zealand, who were bowled out for 167 in 44.3 overs.An already tough chase was made harder for the visitors when Nicola Browne was taken to hospital after retiring hurt on 6. Taking a quick single, Browne was hit in the back by a Kate Blackwell throw, overbalanced and in the fall knocked a tooth through her lip. It was a sorry end to a disappointing day for Browne, who opened the bowling for New Zealand and delivered five wides and a no-ball in her third and final over.Australia fell one run short of their highest score against New Zealand, with the opener Leah Poulton and the stand-in captain Lisa Sthalekar leading the way. Poulton, in her fourth one-day international, followed up her match-winning century on Tuesday with an entertaining 68 from 76 balls, which included ten boundaries, before she was run out attempting a quick single. Poulton, a former Australia Under-19 captain, attacked while the field was up during the first 20 overs and was particularly strong when playing down the ground.Sthalekar continued her consistent series with 43 from 42 balls, but she was caught after top-edging an attempted slog over midwicket from the bowling of Anna Dodd. Jodie Purves kept the scoreboard ticking with a run-a-ball 33, while Nitschke (20 not out) and Blackwell (15) also contributed to the strong total.When the medium-pacer Helen Watson replaced the wayward Browne the scoring temporarily dried up. Watson tied the batsmen down, bowling 26 dot balls before Australia scored from her, and claimed the wicket of Melissa Bulow in her third over.Bulow (14) tried to break the shackles by lofting Watson over the infield but was caught by Ros Kember running back at mid-off. When Michelle Goszko (29) joined Poulton in the 11th over the runs began to flow again as New Zealand pushed through their two powerplays.Poulton took 16 off one Aimee Mason over and during the middle of the innings the New Zealand bowlers struggled for penetration. Sarah Tsukigawa (2 for 39) and Watson, who finished with 2 for 32 from ten overs, minimised the damage, although the side was not helped by 16 wides. Watson was a shining light with the ball and she also hit the stumps from midwicket to run out Kirsten Pike for 1.Tight bowling, fielding and early wickets to Shelley Nitschke, the left-arm orthodox spinner, helped set up Australia’s win. The fast bowler Clea Smith, who replaced Cathryn Fitzpatrick for this match, removed the dangerous Rebecca Rolls for 11 and New Zealand were struggling at 1 for 23 in the tenth over.Haidee Tiffen and Kember had just begun to find the boundary with some ease when Nitschke (3 for 32) claimed both batsmen. Kember was caught at mid-on attempting to loft the ball over the infield for 18 and Tiffen was bowled for a 31-ball 30.Although Maria Fahey (56) made her second consecutive half-century to add some respectability to the score, she lost partners at regular intervals and the required run rate spiralled. Smith and Sarah Andrews returned to take the final wickets and finished with two apiece.Australia will be without the captain Karen Rolton for the final game in the series on Saturday. Rolton, who missed the past two matches, will be out for up to eight weeks and is expected to have surgery on her injured knee early next month.

Surrey facing final week battle after draw

Scorecard
Points TableWarwickshire’s clash against Surrey at Edgbaston petered out into a tame draw on the final day. Mark Ramprakash helped himself to another century but with Warwickshire’s first division status confirmed yesterday they will not have been too bothered by the outcome. The draw leaves Surrey needing a win in their last game of the season, against Middlesex, to avoid relegation.However, Warwickshire will have sensed an outside chance of forcing a win after they snapped up two early wickets. Mark Butcher fell to Alex Loudon – the young offspinner who is interesting the England selectors with his bowling – and Saqlain Mushtaq was caught off Makhaya Ntini, leaving Surrey 70 for 3, still 43 behind.But Rikki Clarke made a forceful 45, adding 93 with Ramprakash, and taking Surrey into the lead. Ramprakash had few problems reaching his century from 174 balls and as the draw became assured he and Jonathan Batty eased their way to a stand of 150.When Ramprakash fell Warwickshire were set an impossible 201 and play was called off after 11 overs, leaving Surrey on the brink of relegation.

Enver Mall elected fourth selector

Enver Mall has been elected the fourth selector on the national selection panel in South Africa. This decision was taken by Ray Mali, the president of the South African board, at Tuesday’s meeting in Johannesburg. Mall will join Omar Henry, the convener of selectors, Eric Simons, the national team’s coach, and Gary Kirsten – who was recently appointed as the high performance manager – on the panel for a one-year term.Mall, 42, represented Natal and the SACOS XI as an opening batsman between 1980 and 1990. He is currently a selector for the KwaZulu Natal Dolphins, and was chosen ahead of Mustapha Khan and Joubert Strydom.The board was notified that Haroon Lorgat, who was originally nominated, had withdrawn his candidature in order to focus his attention on the upcoming election to the treasurer’s post. The selection panel will meet on Friday to select a squad for the tour of Sri Lanka in July and August.There were other developments too, including the resignation of John Blair, the treasurer of the board. Blair had served on the board for the last 11 years and was elected treasurer in 1999. Blair had also worked in the ICC Audit Committee.Meanwhile, it was also announced that the audit committee of the board was looking into the report on the alleged financial irregularities by Diteko Modise, the the former finance and administration general manager. The committee will make their recommendations to the general council on July 10.

Kenway and Giddins shine in win over Zimbabwe

Hampshire 262 for 5 (Kenway 120*, Mascarenhas 50) beat Zimbabwe 246 (Marillier 54, Giddins 4 for 33) by 16 runs Zimbabwe’s preparations for the NatWest Series suffered another setback as they slumped to a 16-run defeat against Hampshire at The Rose Bowl. They were bowled out for 246 with Ed Giddins reviving fond memories of his 5 for 15 against Zimbabwe at Lord’s in 2000.This time Giddins took 4 for 33, and despite 53 from Douglas Marillier and consistent scoring from the middle-order, Zimbabwe couldn’t reach Hampshire’s 262, in which Derek Kenway excelled with 120 not out.The Zimbabweans reshuffled their batting order, with the inexperienced Charles Coventry opening with Marillier and Dion Ebrahim dropping down to No. 3. Coventry made only 2 before miscuing Dimitri Mascarenhas to cover, and Ebrahim only 5 before playing on to Giddins. That made Zimbabwe 19 for 2 in the ninth over, a position which only emphasised their fragile batting.However, their stocks revived through an enterprising partnership between Marillier and Tatenda Taibu, but just as it was looking dangerous Taitu attempted an ill-advised hook against James Hamblin and holed out at long leg for 29 (87 for 3) in the 22nd over. This left much depending on Marillier, who was closing in on his half-century, and the experienced Grant Flower.Marillier was soon bowled by Shaun Udal (111 for 4), but Flower (22) and Stuart Matsikenyeri (38) kept up the momentum before Andy Blignaut launched a rapid 44 from 30 balls to keep Zimbabwe in the hunt. He needed the tail-end to stay with him, but that was asking too much. Gary Brent was bowled for a duck (203 for 8) and Ray Price went for 4 (243 for 9) and that was that.Put in by Taibu, Hampshire made a solid start before Kenway began to play more fluently, batting through the innings for an admirable 120. At 154 for 5 however, Zimbabwe were on course to restrict Hampshire to a low score, but Dimitri Mascarenhas then put pay to that. He chipped in at the end with a rapid half-century and kept the board busy in an imaginative innings, using his feet well, placing the ball cleverly and teasing the fielders with speedy running, as Hampshire clocked up a respectable 262 – a score which was too much for Zimbabwe.And to make things worse for them,, during the match they received the depressing news that their most consistent batsman, Stuart Carlisle, did indeed break his thumb fielding against Somerset. Carlisle hopes he may be fit to play in the last two matches of the triangular tournament, and will stay on with the squad as the selectors have refused to send a replacement.

Jonah voted Chairman of Umpires

Former Somerset player Allan Jones was voted Chairman of the First-Class Umpires Association by his fellow umpires at their end of season meeting at Lord’s recently.Fast bowler “Jonah” joined the Cidermen from Sussex and between 1970 and 1975 played for Somerset in 118 first class matches, taking 291 wickets at just over 29 runs each.After leaving Somerset he went onto play for both Glamorgan and Middlesex to become one of the first players in the modern era to represent four counties.Jonah was elected to the First-Class Umpires list in 1985 and since that time has officiated in nearly 250 County Championship matches. He was elected to the Test panel in 1996, and since then has umpired in One Day Internationals and acted as third umpire in a number of Test matches.Earlier today Jonah told me, “I’m looking forward to the challenge of the job, which involves representing the umpires and working closely with the E.C.B.”

No regrets for family-first Haddin

Brad Haddin has said he has no regrets about the way his Test career ended, when he was not reinstated after stepping down from the Lord’s Test to be with his ill daughter. That decision effectively spelled the end of Haddin’s days as an Australia player, and on Wednesday he confirmed that he was now officially retired from international cricket.While it was fully expected that Haddin, 37, would depart after the Ashes tour, it had appeared likely when the campaign began that he would remain the incumbent gloveman throughout. However, he withdrew from the second Test at Lord’s to be with his four-year-old daughter Mia, who was receiving treatment in a London hospital.Mia had been diagnosed with a rare form of cancer when she was only 17 months old, and Haddin had missed the 2012 tour of the West Indies to remain home with his family at the time. In announcing his retirement at the SCG, Haddin said he had no regrets about his decisions and knew that he was unlikely to be recalled after standing down during the Ashes.”I’m not dirty … I’m no different to any other parent in Australia,” Haddin told reporters in Sydney. “Everyone puts their family first and I have no regrets about doing that.”To me, it wasn’t a choice. I remember saying to [wife] Karina at the hospital that I’ll never play again. She said there was still three Tests to go but cricket is a big business/sport and I’d put myself in a position where I was vulnerable because I walked away. I could live with that because I was needed somewhere else and it was a place that was far more important for me.”My family needed me at that time and the reality is I was unable to take the field for Australia with the 100% focus I needed. I understood the consequences that went with my decision; I put myself in a position to lose my spot and I don’t regret that, not one bit. I wouldn’t change one thing because I don’t regret one thing that happened.”Haddin’s wife Karina and children Mia and Zac were at the press conference at the SCG on Wednesday, and Haddin said Mia’s health was heading in the right direction.”Mia needed surgery [in Sydney] a couple of weeks ago,” he said. “She had some internal bleeds … but everything is going in the right direction. She’s a normal four-year-old girl and the surgery will allow for her to enjoy a better quality of life.”Haddin’s retirement means he will finish his career with 66 Tests to his name, along with 3266 runs at 32.98 and 270 dismissals. That places him fourth on the Australian Test wicketkeeping tally, behind Adam Gilchrist, Ian Healy and Rod Marsh.His successor, Peter Nevill, played well on debut at Lord’s, and Haddin said it was apparent when the team headed to Derby for a tour match ahead of the third Test that the selectors were leaning towards retaining Nevill. Haddin said he spoke to national selector Rod Marsh to ensure that Nevill was given enough of a chance in Derby to prepare properly for the Test.”I’ve been in cricket long enough to know when you’re about to be dropped because people start talking to you differently,” Haddin said. “I remember saying to ‘Nev’, ‘I’m not playing in this third Test, you’re in’ and he said ‘no, no’ but I said I’d ask Rod because we needed to sort it out. Pete hadn’t kept much in England and I thought if he was playing in the Test he’d need to get used to the conditions.”What was meant to happen was Rod said we’d share the keeping in that match and I said ‘Rod, I’ve been around for 15 years, if you want me to go out and give you the energy, the perfect keeping game, I’ll go and do that but if you know what’s going to happen cut the bullshit and tell us – don’t play one off against the other because you know after 15 years what I can do’.”In the end I made the call. I’m not there to muck around, we were there to play for Australia and we had to prepare the best we could and that meant Nev had to keep. My thought was we were halfway through an Ashes series and this idea about one of us keeping for the first 30 overs when they knew what the decision was, well I thought let’s get on with it, you’ve made your decision and that’s how it unfolded.”Haddin said now was the perfect time to retire from internationals and first-class cricket, although he will play on for the Sydney Sixers in the Big Bash League. The Sixers confirmed in a press release on Wednesday that Haddin was still a key member of their squad for this summer.”I’ve only ever wanted to play at the SCG. It’s great to be here today to make my announcement,” Haddin said. “I came to the realisation after Lord’s. I’ve had a privileged run, but I lost the hunger on the Ashes tour. It was an easy decision to retire.”

Pakistan batsmen, Yasir pummel Sri Lanka

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsThe third ODI ended badly for Sri Lanka, whose cricket team were pummeled by 135 runs, but it was made worse by an outbreak of violence in the stands, which forced a half-hour suspension of play. Rocks were thrown inside the southeastern stand, and when offenders were evicted from the ground, projectiles were thrown from outside the stadium, through the back of the same, open stand. One of these rocks made its way to the field, and match referee Javagal Srinath suspended play until the situation was brought under control by authorities.Sri Lanka’s on-field loss, meanwhile, was set up by a commanding Pakistan batting performance, featuring a lively opening stand, two brisk fifties from Sarfraz Ahmed and Mohammad Hafeez, and a sprint at the death that lifted them to 316 for 4. Sri Lanka began losing wickets in the sixth over, and never appeared to have the measure of the target. They were all out for 181 in the 42nd over, and now trail 1-2 in the five-match series.It was the hosts’ bowling that faltered first, however, as a bare-bones attack produced another insipid showing. Sri Lanka made no changes to an attack that features only two specialist bowlers, and relied on four allrounders to deliver the lion’s share of overs. Of the four wickets they claimed, two were run-outs. Malinga disappeared for 80 from his full quota, leaking 21 runs in his final over.All of Pakistan’s batsmen made meaningful contributions but, batting from No.4, Sarfraz’s 77 from 74 balls ensured their early gains were consolidated, and that his team were well-set for the late dash.Sarfraz was a dynamo at the crease, pilfering singles all around the wicket, and capitalizing on severe of errors of length. Equally adept against pace and spin, he scored at a run-a-ball at least against all bowlers except Angelo Mathews (seven runs off nine balls) and Tillakaratne Dilshan from whom he took six runs from seven deliveries. He might have provided the fireworks himself, had he not been run-out in the approach to the death overs.Ahmed Shehzad prospered in the arc between midwicket and long-on early in Pakistan’s innings, crashing Angelo Mathews through that region off successive balls, while finding singles square either side of the pitch. Azhar Ali was not as aggressive, but was adept at turning the strike over. He became Pakistan’s fastest batsman to 1000 ODI runs when he creamed Lasith Malinga through square leg in the eighth over.Making use of muddled lengths from Sri Lanka’s seamers, the opening pair played and missed at one or two, but mustered a brisk scoring rate. They hit 55 runs from the first 10 overs, then 88 from the first 15. Though the occasional lofted stroke only just cleared the in-field, neither batsman seemed troubled by Sri Lanka’s new-ball bowling.The hosts’ breakthrough came in the 17th over, thanks in equal part to a well-executed short-ball plan and careless batting from Shehzad. Mathews and Malinga packed the leg side, deploying three men in the deep and two close, catching, as Malinga sent his first two balls at the batsmen’s bodies.Expecting another one at his ribs next, Shehzad seemed to play a pre-meditated pull shot, but couldn’t control his stroke when the ball came a little wider of off stump. He was caught by deep midwicket. Azhar also fell needlessly in the 24th over, when miscommunication with Hafeez found him well short of his ground on 49.Hafeez’s knock was full of edges and mis-hits, but he chose his areas well, usually getting the ball to drop some distance from the fielders. Thisara Perera teased his outside edge with full-length deliveries occasionally but, as was the case with Nuwan Pradeep, could not build pressure on the batsmen for any length of time.Hafeez enjoyed milking Sachith Pathirana’s left-arm spin, occasionally trekking down the surface to loft him straight or, more often, sliding back to turn him behind square. He was essentially the link-man between the two fast-paced ends of the innings and will be pleased to continue his good run with the bat, now that he plays as a specialist batsman.Though Sri Lanka managed to control the flow of runs briefly, after Sarfraz’s exit in the 45th over, they were unable to prevent the final charge. Malinga, who had relied exclusively on slower balls for 13 straight deliveries, was brutally treated by Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Rizwan in the final over. The pair hit a six and three fours to finish the innings.Sri Lanka’s opening batsmen were unable to reproduce their explosive success from Pallekele. Tillakaratne Dilshan holed out to mid-off for 14, and Kusal Perera was caught brilliantly by Sarfraz off Anwar Ali soon after. Lahiru Thirimanne attempted to get the chase back on track, but continued to lose partners. Upul Tharanga was stumped off Yasir Shah for 16 and Angelo Mathews ended a laboured 12-ball stay by sending a leading edge down long-off’s throat.Thirimanne himself moved to a much-needed fifty, but when Dinesh Chandimal was dismissed soon after, leaving Sri Lanka at 130 for 5 in the 27th over, Sri Lanka’s challenge was virtually done. On a turning track, Yasir ended up taking two more scalps to finish with 4 for 29, while Anwar Ali and debutant Imad Wasim, who bowls left-arm spin, had two apiece.

Comilla bank on international players, Rangpur on allrounders

Comilla Victorians

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The newcomers will be led by Mashrafe Mortaza, who led Dhaka Gladiators to the title in the 2013 season. The set-up is also bolstered by other Bangladesh internationals in Imrul Kayes, Liton Das, and Shuvagata Hom. However, the youngsters – Ariful Haque, Mahmudul Hasan, and Sunzamul Isam – need to step up to lend balance to Victorians.A lot will depend on the foreign contingent with Andre Russell, Shoaib Malik and Ahmed Shehzad arriving later in the tournament. Victorians will pin their hopes on the West Indian pair of Marlon Samuels and Sunil Narine while 39-year-old Darren Stevens from England is expected to double up as a middle-order batsman and change-up seamer.Position in BPL 2
Didn’t participateKey player
Sunil Narine has been given the go-ahead to play in the BPL despite having an ICC test hanging over his head, after being reported for a suspect action during the Sri Lanka tour. Victorians are hoping that the offspinner will be able to play the first few matches and get the action cleared.Below the radar
Ariful Haque used to be a bits-and-pieces allrounder but has now developed into a consistent, full-fledged batsman in domestic cricket. He is a powerful hitter, and will be expected to fill an important role in the middle order.Squad Mashrafe Mortaza (capt), Abu Hider, Ahmed Shehzad, Alok Kapali, Ariful Haque, Dhiman Ghosh, Imrul Kayes, Kamrul Islam Rabbi, Nuwan Kulasekara, Liton Das, Mahmudul Hasan, Naeem Islam, Sunil Narine, Robiul Islam, Andre Russell, Marlon Samuels, Krishmar Santokie, Shoaib Malik, Shuvagata Hom, Darren Stevens, Sunzamul Islam, Lahiru Thirimanne

Rangpur Riders

Misbah-ul-Haq brings with him the experience of 124 T20 matches•BCCI

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Rangpur Riders will target a top-four finish after a disappointing tournament in 2013. They have strong allrounders such as Darren Sammy, Thisara Perera, Lendl Simmons, Kevin O’Brien and Mohammad Nabi besides adding Misbah-ul-Haq, who brings with him the experience of 124 T20 games.More crucial would be Shakib Al Hasan, who was quickly snapped up by Riders when they were lucky to be the first team to call the icon players. Shakib, who missed the second and third ODIs against Zimbabwe on paternity leave, is expected to be available throughout the BPL season. After having Soumya Sarkar as the first pick in the regular draft, Riders took took Arafat Sunny, allrounder Muktar Ali and batsman Mohammad Mithun. Seamer Abu Jayed Chowdhury is another exciting prospect.Position in BPL 2
FifthKey player
Riders’ fortunes will revolve around their icon player Shakib Al Hasan. He will lead the side and shoulder responsibility with the bat and ball. Shakib, world’s premier allrounder according to the ICC T20 rankings, though, has done it all before.Below the radar
A couple of years ago, Muktar Ali was called the future Ryan Harris of Bangladesh cricket by his Rangpur coach Shane Jurgensen. He has improved substantially and was rewarded with a place in the Bangladesh A side.Squad Shakib Al Hasan (capt), Abu Jayed, Arafat Sunny, Juhurul Islam, Jubair Hossain, Marshall Ayub, Misbah-ul-Haq, Mohammad Mithun, Mohammad Nabi, Muktar Ali, Murad Khan, Kevin O’Brien, Thisara Perera, Raqibul Hasan, Darren Sammy, Saqlain Sajib, Sachithra Senanayake, Lendl Simmons, Soumya Sarkar, Wahab Riaz

Sylhet Superstars

Mushfiqur Rahim is the second-highest run-scorer in the BPL•Associated Press

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Sylhet Superstars have one of the strongest batting line-ups in the tournament, boasting the likes of Ravi Bopara and Brad Hodge, alongside Mushfiqur Rahim, Junaid Siddique and Josh Cobb. The bowling attack also seems to have most bases covered, with Ajantha Mendis, Rubel Hossain and Abdur Razzak at the helm with assistance coming from the Pakistan pair of Sohail Tanvir and Shahid Afridi.Mohammad Shahid, Nurul Hasan and Nazmul Hossain are also good domestic picks while Mominul Haque has been given another opportunity to prove himself as a T20 batsman.Position in last edition
ThirdKey player
Mushfiqur Rahim is second on the list of highest scorers in the BPL, just behind his new team-mate Hodge. Mushfiqur has always been a key figure in the Bangladesh middle order, and his role will be no different for his franchise.Below the radar
Nurul Hasan, 21, is rated highly as a wicketkeeper-batsman, some even calling him the heir to Mushfiqur’s gloves. Nurul is also an innovative batsman and this season’s BPL is another opportunity to build on the gains.Squad Mushfiqur Rahim (capt), Abdur Razzak, Abu Sayeem, Ravi Bopara, Josh Cobb, Brad Hodge, Chris Jordan, Junaid Siddique, Ajantha Mendis, Mohammad Shahid, Mominul Haque, Nazmul Hossain, Nazmul Hossain Milon, Nurul Hasan, Rubel Hossain, Shahid Afridi, Sohail Tanvir

It should have stayed in the dressing room – Shoaib

Shoaib Akhtar is apologetic about his actions in South Africa © AFP

Shoaib Akhtar has blamed Pakistan allrounder Shahid Afridi for the spat that led to him hitting fast bowler Mohammad Asif with a bat during Pakistan’s build-up to the ICC World Twenty20 in South Africa. On his return home today after being thrown out of the squad, Shoaib apologised for his actions and said the matter should have stayed in the dressing room.Shoaib, who has been handed an indefinite ban for the scuffle two days ago, said he didn’t mean to hit Asif, whom he described as a younger brother. “I apologised to Asif and he forgave me but another team-mate, Afridi, took the matter further and it forced the management to send me back,” Shoaib said.”The incident began with a verbal spat between me and Afridi, who used foul language,” Shoaib said, “and Asif intervened and in anger I hit Asif with a bat.””Afridi said things about my family which I could not tolerate. He made comments that cannot be called jokes. I am sorry for what happened and it should not have happened. I request the authorities not to ban me for a lengthy period. I want to play for my country and talk of a life ban or lengthy ban is worrying.”Afridi, however, denied that he had provoked Shoaib and was surprised at the accusations.”I can’t say much because I am bound by the central contract,” Afridi told PTI. “But it is fact that Shoaib has been facing one problem or the other in the last two years and he is frustrated. I have had a good relationship with him so I don’t know why he has targeted me. But he is lying and it would be better if everyone asked Asif what happened. I know Asif could have suffered more injuries if I had not stepped in.”Shoaib also criticised the media for blowing the incident out of proportion and making him a “villain”. “The matter got blown up. The media has contributed to the whole controversy. There is a lobby which has always been trying to malign me by selling negative news about me. I request you all to stop doing that. Stop spreading false propaganda against me, stop selling my name in the name of news.”The main theme, though, was contrition. “If Pakistan lose [in the ICC World Twenty20] because of bowling, I will never be able to forgive myself.” Shoaib also reiterated his commitment for the Pakistan team and said, “I have played with passion for Pakistan. It means something to me. I have turned down a lucrative contract with the ICL [Indian Cricket League].”However, Pakistan board official Shafqat Naghmi said Shoaib would face a disciplinary committee hearing very soon. “Akhtar is suspended indefinitely until a disciplinary committee meeting. He is also issued a notice to explain his comments against a doping tribunal.”Pakistan’s president, General Pervez Musharraf, who is also the PCB’s patron-in-chief, reportedly directed the board to take strict action against Shoaib. “President Musharraf directed PCB chairman Nasim Ashraf to take strict action against Akhtar as the quarrel between him and Asif gave a bad name to Pakistan,” private channel Geo reported.Pakistan have asked the ICC to approve the uncapped allrounder Sohail Tanveer as the replacement for Shoaib. Their first game of the ICC World Twenty20 is against Scotland on Wednesday.

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