Akram Blasts Pakistan Board Over Player Ban
March 12, 2010
Banning a player like Younus Khan, above, only makes the country look bad, said Wasim Akram. (AFP Photo) Related articles
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Fast bowling legend Wasim Akram said on Thursday that bans on key players for their dismal performance in Australia had made Pakistan’s cricket “a laughingstock” and should be reconsidered
Akram was commenting on the Pakistan Cricket Board’s decision on Wednesday to ban former captains Younus Khan and Mohammad Yousuf indefinitely from the national side following this year’s disastrous Australian tour.
In a humiliating whitewash, Pakistan lost all three tests, all five one-day internationals and the lone Twenty20 international while touring Australia from December to February.
A committee appointed to investigate the fiasco blamed the result on infighting between Mohammad Yousuf and Younus Khan. It recommended, among other sanctions, that they “should not be part of the national team in any format.”
The six-man panel headed by PCB chief operating officer Wasim Bari also banned Shoaib Malik and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan for one year on charges of violating the players’ code of conduct.
Other recommendations included a three million rupee ($35,000) fine for Shahid Afridi, who was caught by TV cameras biting the ball during the final one-day match of the Australian tour, in Perth.
The Akmal brothers, Kamran Akmal and Umar, were also fined and put on a six-month probation for violating discipline on tour.
Akram, who was a member of the committee but did not attend any of its meetings held last month, said the bans on Mohammad Yousuf and Younus Khan were embarrassing.
“These penalties have made Pakistan cricket a laughingstock in the world,” Akram told Agence France-Presse from Mumbai, where he is on a coaching assignment.
“You don’t ban players for such problems. Had I attended any meeting or given recommendations I would have suggested fines, but not bans.”
The former left-arm pace bowler said Pakistan cricket could not afford such decisions.
“Pakistan cricket is in turmoil,” Akram said. “We are anyway not playing [international] cricket [at home] for security reasons and this will further embarrass our players.
“No board in the world deprives cricketers of their livelihood. If there were discipline problems, it was the duty of the captain, Yousuf, coach Intikhab Alam and manager Abdul Raqeeb to deal with them.”
He said the penalties, ahead of Pakistan’s defense of the World Twenty20 title in the West Indies next month, would wreck the national team.
“Pakistan has already been weakened due to various problems and this will further hit it badly,” he said. “We can’t even find 11 good players because of lack of talent in the country.
He said that both Younus Khan and Mohammad Yousuf were still needed in both tests and one-day cricket. AFP
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