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"I believe international cricket will be fully restored in Pakistan within two years" : Najam Sethi

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"I believe international cricket will be fully restored in Pakistan within two years" : Najam Sethi

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chief Najam Sethi has admitted that a number of National Team’s senior players are unfit for modern cricket.

In an interview to British media outlet, Sethi expressed his concern that some of the veteran players in the team no longer have the required reflexes needed for modern cricket. He admitted that the team tends to struggle in ODI cricket. “Now our focus is on the 2019 World Cup and we are getting ready for it.”

Speaking about Pakistan’s horrible One Day International (ODI) defeat against New Zealand, Sethi said it would take some time for the youngsters in the side to become ‘stars’. “The PSL has prepared us for T20s. Now we have to prepare for ODIs and Tests.”

He assured that cricket in Pakistan would receive a huge boost due to the new talent being discovered at school and club-level cricket and in PSL.

The chairman also expressed his hopes that after improving security situation in the country and successfully-hosting T20 matches in Lahore, the time is not far when Pakistan is able to host complete ODI and Test series.

“If we prepare our stadiums, we will be able to host matches with time. I believe international cricket will be fully restored in Pakistan within two years, at most,” he said. Sethi spoke about the successful tours of World XI, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe to Pakistan and said, “West Indies will be touring in March.”

https://www.brecorder.com/2018/02/0...-senior-players-are-unfit-for-modern-cricket/
 
What took him so long to admit this....
Chalo atleast he has admitted but i am sure these seniors will still remain in team
 
Nothing will happen.I used to be optimistic about Pakistan cricket and still am in many ways.But underperforming seniors will always remain in the team
 
The only senior I can see getting the boot is Hafeez. Seems like he will be wrapped up for good now. Malik doesn't seem to be going anywhere anytime soon.
 
Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chief Najam Sethi has admitted that a number of National Team’s senior players are unfit for modern cricket.

In an interview to British media outlet, Sethi expressed his concern that some of the veteran players in the team no longer have the required reflexes needed for modern cricket. He admitted that the team tends to struggle in ODI cricket. “Now our focus is on the 2019 World Cup and we are getting ready for it.”

Speaking about Pakistan’s horrible One Day International (ODI) defeat against New Zealand, Sethi said it would take some time for the youngsters in the side to become ‘stars’. “The PSL has prepared us for T20s. Now we have to prepare for ODIs and Tests.”

He assured that cricket in Pakistan would receive a huge boost due to the new talent being discovered at school and club-level cricket and in PSL.

The chairman also expressed his hopes that after improving security situation in the country and successfully-hosting T20 matches in Lahore, the time is not far when Pakistan is able to host complete ODI and Test series.

“If we prepare our stadiums, we will be able to host matches with time. I believe international cricket will be fully restored in Pakistan within two years, at most,” he said. Sethi spoke about the successful tours of World XI, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe to Pakistan and said, “West Indies will be touring in March.”

https://www.brecorder.com/2018/02/0...-senior-players-are-unfit-for-modern-cricket/

Is it finalized that WI are touring Pakistan in March?
[MENTION=133760]Abdullah719[/MENTION] @saj
 
Don't think he should be putting unnecessary pressure on himself and the board by claiming international cricket can be fully restored to Pakistan by 2 years. Should just try to emphasize they're doing all to achieve this. Good that he's acknowledging the seniority issue hampring the team performances.
 
I am sure Sethi hasn’t seen MoHa spanking Kiwi pacers all over the park when it mattered - that’s when batting first & setting target. Only for that the bowlers were trash and found the score 50 under per to defend .....
 
Yes Sethi ,,now convert words in to something good and kick these seniors out.
 
This time i have high hopes except hafiz.

Hope so, but i’ll be surprised actually. It’s not about seniority culture only - we do lots of quality discussion in PP, still many posters are convinced that Azhar did wonders in CT final - which indicates something is not right there.
 
Never said they would be gone but they are not going to linger around for another 3-4 years.

When, they should have been history 3-4 years back. Can you explain why on earth after CT win - MoHa, Malik, Azhar, Wahab won’t retire in grace? Simple reason is that they know - they can squeeze few more years by managing relationship.

PAK was brutally exposed in NZ, hence Sethi had to say something to chill down the hot air - next series is few months later; people will forget everything.
 
Is it finalized that WI are touring Pakistan in March?

[MENTION=133760]Abdullah719[/MENTION] @saj

Yes it is finalised that Windies will travel to Pakistan for 3 match T20I series although that will be one off series and won't happen every year as said earlier.
According to Sethi even dates are finalised for the series but they wont tell dates to anyone as of now
 
Really?

You don't have to be a genius to figure that out. Also, why not take action against those players straight away.

The one main/basic priority of an athlete is to stay fit and if he cant stay fit why be in the team?
 
[MENTION=79064]MMHS[/MENTION] Sethi is a strong chairman and can do it.lets hope but i will always keep my eception here,,MR,professor.
 
When, they should have been history 3-4 years back. Can you explain why on earth after CT win - MoHa, Malik, Azhar, Wahab won’t retire in grace? Simple reason is that they know - they can squeeze few more years by managing relationship.

PAK was brutally exposed in NZ, hence Sethi had to say something to chill down the hot air - next series is few months later; people will forget everything.

I was really hoping they would retire after the CT final. I actually wanted these guys to have a respectful farewell, Because these four arn’t arrogant and stuck up like many of our former cricketers.

But now I hope they just discard of them together.
 
The exact quotes from the BBC urdu interview are below

http://www.bbc.com/urdu/sport-42968737


Look PSL has prepared our team for Twenty20, now we have to prepare our team for Tests and OD cricket also

We have to prepare the a new ODI team and it will take time to make current players into stars

We are OK in Tests but weak in OD cricket

All our focus is now on preparations for the 2019 World Cup

We have now players who can play in the middle order but it will take them some time to mature

We have modern coaches and good players so we will improve

Dont know why you are so negative? in the last 12 months we have been number one in Test ranking and also done well in ODI and T20Is so why such negative thoughts? [in reply to question why Pak cannot play in an aggressive mode and score 300 runs which has become norm in today's cricket]

I feel that in atmost 2 years time, [international] cricket will be restored in Pakistan

Whatever loss (due to no international tours) happened is in the past; We are trying to reverse this now World XI has come, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe also and now WI are coming over in March

And we will show you some surprise in next 12 months also

Whoever we caught and punished, we did so obviously because we had proof against them and we were vindicated [PSL Corruption]
Its like this, if you are caught then off with your head, until I am around, there will in reality be zero tolerance
 
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[MENTION=79064]MMHS[/MENTION] Sethi is a strong chairman and can do it.lets hope but i will always keep my eception here,,MR,professor.

You see, I have lots of respect for NS, because he is a good administrator. But, he is not a former cricketer, neither been involved with cricket management - there is a good chance that he'll be misguided. Ideally, one should find someone with both qualities which doesn't happen often (hardly happens these days, gone are the days that pro cricketers can continue academic career till Masters - Mazid Khan was one), therefore it's essential that there is one high profile position like Chief Technical Officer or Director Cricket - who is basically in charge of everything related to the core game under CEO/Chairman and he comes from a 25 years of on job cricket experience (with some education, but that doesn't need to be from Oxford :)

If you notice, in recent past despite all his antics, I found Ijaz Butt fixing/handling cricketers better than most and it was during his time last, when a bunch of young players in their U23s, made PAK team - Amir, Umar, Amin, Ahmed, Asad, Azhar, Wahab comes to mind. PCB had one, but he is Haroon Rashid :( May be someone like Mudassar can be a very good fit for this - who'll get his hand on people in charge of anything related to the core game - different squad (s) development, coaching staff, domestic cricket, wickets, balls used, schedules, selections .........

Not sure if NS is explained the situation in proper spirit - otherwise, that QeA tournament won't have come to this style, guy isn't that bad.
 
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I was really hoping they would retire after the CT final. I actually wanted these guys to have a respectful farewell, Because these four arn’t arrogant and stuck up like many of our former cricketers.

But now I hope they just discard of them together.

Won't be - all that you are hearing now is just to buy out time from that 5-0 drubbing.

Few months later, you'll also forget when they, holding the key spots in ODI batting order will show their class against IRL or ZIM on 300+ condition. In between few odd moments that come against Poms or Aussies or Kiwis or SAFs ... you can take that as statistical anomaly, out layers. Besides, there will be enough media mockery to distract you with charts, plots, examples, logic ...... above all - lack of talent to replace such quality & experience.

I have seen that many times, and I am one who doesn't change my stand over night - this same CS was the most powerful Captain in history after Kardar & Imran, and had the best coach around for entire period (another surprise - hardly any coach managed PAK team for 4+ years at one go) to support young players - yet in 4 years, only few players (3/4 I can recall) debuted under him - for 1 game each, within a period that cuts path with PAK's back to back U19 WCs.

I am yet to be convinced that, things have changed - I hope I am proven wrong here.
 
Won't be - all that you are hearing now is just to buy out time from that 5-0 drubbing.

Few months later, you'll also forget when they, holding the key spots in ODI batting order will show their class against IRL or ZIM on 300+ condition. In between few odd moments that come against Poms or Aussies or Kiwis or SAFs ... you can take that as statistical anomaly, out layers. Besides, there will be enough media mockery to distract you with charts, plots, examples, logic ...... above all - lack of talent to replace such quality & experience.

I have seen that many times, and I am one who doesn't change my stand over night - this same CS was the most powerful Captain in history after Kardar & Imran, and had the best coach around for entire period (another surprise - hardly any coach managed PAK team for 4+ years at one go) to support young players - yet in 4 years, only few players (3/4 I can recall) debuted under him - for 1 game each, within a period that cuts path with PAK's back to back U19 WCs.

I am yet to be convinced that, things have changed - I hope I am proven wrong here.

Things have definitely not changed. I would love to sit here and suggest ways to improve things but the truth is they’ll never actually implement these changes and if we’re completley honest there are many recommendations that have actually been put into action and it hasn’t changed a thing. Inzamam becoming a selector is a prime example of that.
 
I think what will happen is that there will be the occasional tour where the PCB throw crazy money at players and that's about it.

There is no way the likes of Australia, England and NZ will tour Pakistan.
 
Keep dreaming as it won't be until you don't actually step up and upgrade your grounds around the country and get them to atleast minimal international grounds.
 
Keep dreaming as it won't be until you don't actually step up and upgrade your grounds around the country and get them to atleast minimal international grounds.

If money is spent on grounds then who will pay for Sethi's foreign trips and vacationing?
 
If PCB is serious about the next WC, they should immediately get rid of Azhar, Hafeez, Shehzad, and Malik from the ODI team and give the younger replacements an year to settle as a team.
 
I have a feeling that atleast some countries will agree to tour regularly. Slowly but surely things are returning back to normal.
 
I think what will happen is that there will be the occasional tour where the PCB throw crazy money at players and that's about it.

There is no way the likes of Australia, England and NZ will tour Pakistan.

If thats the case then PCB might as well pull all agreements because thats not acceptable. The country is literally good to go for cricket. I don't see any reason why teams can't tour if they are going to BD.
 
So PSL prepared team for t20, and now we have to just prepare for odi and test. Let's organize PSL in test and one day😉🤔
 
I think what will happen is that there will be the occasional tour where the PCB throw crazy money at players and that's about it.

There is no way the likes of Australia, England and NZ will tour Pakistan.

These teams will forever boycott Pakistan if left to them. The PCB needs to keep up the public, social media pressure, back door lobbying, networking, continous international cricket in Pakistan to eventually shame these teams into touring.
 
These teams will forever boycott Pakistan if left to them. The PCB needs to keep up the public, social media pressure, back door lobbying, networking, continous international cricket in Pakistan to eventually shame these teams into touring.

Yeah, remember both Aus and NZ were not touring pakistan long before SL incident. I don't think Australia has toured in the last two decade, certainly not in this millennium. England might tour as ECB has some soft spot for Pakistan. PCB will have to use that to have some sort of english team visiting Pakistan. NZ is also not a huge board in terms of finances. May be PCB can use financial independence gained by PSL, goodwill from players like McMillan, etc to force them to send atleast an A team to pakistan. I am afraid Pak doesn't have much leverage on Australia. there they will have to hope some sanity prevails on Aus side after few years..
 
Yeah, remember both Aus and NZ were not touring pakistan long before SL incident. I don't think Australia has toured in the last two decade, certainly not in this millennium. England might tour as ECB has some soft spot for Pakistan. PCB will have to use that to have some sort of english team visiting Pakistan. NZ is also not a huge board in terms of finances. May be PCB can use financial independence gained by PSL, goodwill from players like McMillan, etc to force them to send atleast an A team to pakistan. I am afraid Pak doesn't have much leverage on Australia. there they will have to hope some sanity prevails on Aus side after few years..

With Australia it has to be a combination of everything. I think consistent showing of awesome hospitality via the PSL and hyping up the hospitality shown to foreign players in Pakistan via PSL will go a long way. Then you may get a few Australian players in the PSL and that will create a big impact. The PCB needs to hold discussions with Cricket Australia and start with a T-20 series in Pakistan atleast.
 
With Australia it has to be a combination of everything. I think consistent showing of awesome hospitality via the PSL and hyping up the hospitality shown to foreign players in Pakistan via PSL will go a long way. Then you may get a few Australian players in the PSL and that will create a big impact. The PCB needs to hold discussions with Cricket Australia and start with a T-20 series in Pakistan atleast.

That can be one approach. For that to happen, for touring teams and mercenaries to actually enjoy Pakistan's hospitality or whatever else Pakistan has to offer, the PSL has to be the bait and PSL has to completely move to Pakistan. PSL4 has to be mostly organized in Pak and PSL 5 completely in Pak. That is two year window to get the whole tournament back in Pak. If PCB continuous to play majority of PSL at UAE what face will it have to invite international teams to Pak when it cannot hold a domestic tournament in Pakistan?

Another way is to go to Australia/NZ/SA and play some awesome cricket so that Pakistan becomes an attractive touring team. That will build some leverage for Pakistan. Other teams will realize the importance of Pakistan tour to them. Pak may not become as big as India financially but it can still build enough clout to influence other teams. Unless the team improves both skill wise and financially PCB will hold very few cards when they go to the negotiation table
 
A delusional PR man who's all flash but devoid of substance. Our scheduling is abysmal with long gaps between series leaving players undercooked; the standard of our FC competition and pitches are appalling; grassroots coaching is inadequate; our U19 team flopped badly vs India recently and lost to Afghanistan; and our A team is nonexistent.

Resolving these issues requires quiet, diligent behind the scenes work which earns less credit from Pak media.

However arranging a few World XI exhibition matches and a couple of home PSL matches and you can revel in the adulation of these short-term events that do nothing for Pakistan's cricket infrastructure.
 
A delusional PR man who's all flash but devoid of substance. Our scheduling is abysmal with long gaps between series leaving players undercooked; the standard of our FC competition and pitches are appalling; grassroots coaching is inadequate; our U19 team flopped badly vs India recently and lost to Afghanistan; and our A team is nonexistent.

Resolving these issues requires quiet, diligent behind the scenes work which earns less credit from Pak media.

However arranging a few World XI exhibition matches and a couple of home PSL matches and you can revel in the adulation of these short-term events that do nothing for Pakistan's cricket infrastructure.

Pakistan can only play the cards that we are dealt with. These Exhibition and PSL matches and the numerous Zim, SL, WI tours are confidence building measures necessary to give confidence to the major teams like Australia, England, New Zealand, South Africa etc
 
If they focus on the Windies tour and making it a success then it will go a long way to create a strategic long-term plan.
 
This is the third time I am reading this thread but with different titles everytime. There should be a Najam Sethi Media Statements Mega Thread. :inti
 
If Pakistan could pull off a heist and get England over, say in 2020, Sept to October (before the Ashes) almost every side, barring Aus and India would be open to tours.

All this requires is agood diplomacy and ultimately money. Teams tour India, which isnt all that much more safe than Pakistan (cricket stadiums have been attacked in India in recent times, so obviously safety isnt the issue we are led to believe it is. The key being? MOney. If Pakistan can prove a Pak v anyone test/ODI/T20 series is lucrative, maybe 3rd behind Ind/Eng, then bang, problem solved.

However, there are obvious political and religious biases from other sides and that is where diplomacy comes into play. Sethi has done a good job till now, maybe he can build a team, delegations to travel to the ECB, WI, NZ and so on.
 
When will you sort our domestic cricket out? When will you improve the quality of pitches in domestic cricket? When you will sort our international schedule out so we don't have such long gaps without cricket?

These are the questions I want answered.
 
These teams will forever boycott Pakistan if left to them. The PCB needs to keep up the public, social media pressure, back door lobbying, networking, continous international cricket in Pakistan to eventually shame these teams into touring.

It will make no difference.

Also statements from Sethi will make no difference - the only thing that matters is the security situation in Pakistan.
 
It will make no difference.

Also statements from Sethi will make no difference - the only thing that matters is the security situation in Pakistan.

The ideal state of security i.e. zero crime, zero bomb blasts, zero protests, zero strikes, zero clash of protesters/law enforcement protests will never happen. There is a fine line b/w legitimate security concerns and dealing with the refusal of foreign players from Australia, NZ, England, South Africa, WI who are unwilling to tour Pakistan because of fears of a boring, constrained lifestyle.

The ICC asked Pakistan to prove it can host international events and provide the best possible security. The PCB passed the test with flying colors by hosting the Zimbabwe tour, PSL final, World 11 tour, Sri Lanka T-20 game without any issues so that checklist has been checked off. The PCB needs to keep working hard within the ICC and get the ICC to officially get rid of their security concerns so that these Western teams have no more excuses.
 
The ideal state of security i.e. zero crime, zero bomb blasts, zero protests, zero strikes, zero clash of protesters/law enforcement protests will never happen. There is a fine line b/w legitimate security concerns and dealing with the refusal of foreign players from Australia, NZ, England, South Africa, WI who are unwilling to tour Pakistan because of fears of a boring, constrained lifestyle.

The ICC asked Pakistan to prove it can host international events and provide the best possible security. The PCB passed the test with flying colors by hosting the Zimbabwe tour, PSL final, World 11 tour, Sri Lanka T-20 game without any issues so that checklist has been checked off. The PCB needs to keep working hard within the ICC and get the ICC to officially get rid of their security concerns so that these Western teams have no more excuses.

The harsh reality is that ECB, NZC, Cricket Australia and others are nowhere near sending their teams to Pakistan and Sethi's 2 year claim is wishful thinking.

Let's be honest here, the likes of Zimbabwe and the World XI only went to Pakistan because they were paid silly amounts to play cricket there.
 
The harsh reality is that ECB, NZC, Cricket Australia and others are nowhere near sending their teams to Pakistan and Sethi's 2 year claim is wishful thinking.

Let's be honest here, the likes of Zimbabwe and the World XI only went to Pakistan because they were paid silly amounts to play cricket there.

Exactly.
 
The harsh reality is that ECB, NZC, Cricket Australia and others are nowhere near sending their teams to Pakistan and Sethi's 2 year claim is wishful thinking.

Let's be honest here, the likes of Zimbabwe and the World XI only went to Pakistan because they were paid silly amounts to play cricket there.

NZC board isn't that rich so the possibility of them being lured to playing Cricket in Pakistan can't be ruled out. ECB and Cricket Australia will be a challenge but international diplomacy is all about interpersonal relations b/w leaders, we have seen countless miracles b/w nations on extremely touchy and difficult disputes being resolved because of leaders and their relationships with each other.

The point is that the ICC asked PCB to prove it can host events and international matches without any security issues which the PCB has done with flying colors. The ICC can't keep declaring Pakistan persona non grata for Cricket forever based on these circumstances. The PCB needs to keep working hard, lobbying with in the ICC, negotiating with other boards and eventually the ICC will have no reasonable basis to keep their security risks on Pakistan high.

If the Western boards still refuse to play in Pakistan, then they are the ones who will look bad. To be honest PCB needs to think out of the box now, if a Western team refuses to tour Pakistan and violates the FTP and insist on a neutral venue instead then the PCB needs to demand that the Western board bears a signficant portion of the cost of playing on the neutral venue hereby allowing the PCB to have higher margins.

The other thing the PCB needs to work on is to figure out how to make the Pakistan Cricket team more attractive, marketable from a TV rights point of view. This is a marketing issue as well and i am afraid some new names need to be hired in the PCB marketing department.
 
NZC board isn't that rich so the possibility of them being lured to playing Cricket in Pakistan can't be ruled out. ECB and Cricket Australia will be a challenge but international diplomacy is all about interpersonal relations b/w leaders, we have seen countless miracles b/w nations on extremely touchy and difficult disputes being resolved because of leaders and their relationships with each other.

The point is that the ICC asked PCB to prove it can host events and international matches without any security issues which the PCB has done with flying colors. The ICC can't keep declaring Pakistan persona non grata for Cricket forever based on these circumstances. The PCB needs to keep working hard, lobbying with in the ICC, negotiating with other boards and eventually the ICC will have no reasonable basis to keep their security risks on Pakistan high.

If the Western boards still refuse to play in Pakistan, then they are the ones who will look bad. To be honest PCB needs to think out of the box now, if a Western team refuses to tour Pakistan and violates the FTP and insist on a neutral venue instead then the PCB needs to demand that the Western board bears a signficant portion of the cost of playing on the neutral venue hereby allowing the PCB to have higher margins.

The other thing the PCB needs to work on is to figure out how to make the Pakistan Cricket team more attractive, marketable from a TV rights point of view. This is a marketing issue as well and i am afraid some new names need to be hired in the PCB marketing department.

In reference to the bold part: I am in favour of whatever is beneficial to Pakistan cricket, but are we really in a position to do that? As it is, we're not playing India, Bangladesh or Afghanistan.
 
In reference to the bold part: I am in favour of whatever is beneficial to Pakistan cricket, but are we really in a position to do that? As it is, we're not playing India, Bangladesh or Afghanistan.

Why not? If the refusal to play Cricket in Pakistan is unwarranted, no longer supported by facts as the PCB has enough proof and evidence that it can safely host international teams in Pakistan and provide them top notch security on and off the field then what is the justification to force the PCB to continue to pay massively out of pocket to host them on neutral venue? Taking this issue up with the ICC will be a good start. Yes dealing with the likes of BCCI, CA, ECB can be tough but surely dealing with the SL, Ban CB, South Africa, NZB, WI, Zimbabwe and co shouldn't be a problem.
 
Sethi saying 2 days, 2 weeks, 2 months or 2 years makes zero difference to ECB, NZC, CA etc.
 
But are these goals realistic.

Anyone can set goals.

The PSL was also a goal which many people labelled unrealistic. It takes visionary people to make goals reality and Najam Sethi has a good track record so far.
 
The PSL was also a goal which many people labelled unrealistic. It takes visionary people to make goals reality and Najam Sethi has a good track record so far.

The PSL was in the hands of the PCB and those running cricket in Pakistan. It needed sponsors etc. However England, Australia touring Pakistan is not in the hands of those running cricket in Pakistan.
 
The PSL was in the hands of the PCB and those running cricket in Pakistan. It needed sponsors etc. However England, Australia touring Pakistan is not in the hands of those running cricket in Pakistan.

Perfectly in the hands of those running Pakistan Cricket. It is all about lobbying, networking, inter personal relationships. If difficult contentious disputes amongst nations can be resolved due to leaders, getting these teams to tour Pakistan is not an impossibility.
 
Perfectly in the hands of those running Pakistan Cricket. It is all about lobbying, networking, inter personal relationships. If difficult contentious disputes amongst nations can be resolved due to leaders, getting these teams to tour Pakistan is not an impossibility.

Nothing is impossible but the reality is that Pakistan's security situation limits the number of teams that are prepared to tour Pakistan. Lobbying etc will have very little impact.
 
Nothing is impossible but the reality is that Pakistan's security situation limits the number of teams that are prepared to tour Pakistan. Lobbying etc will have very little impact.

Zarb e Azab has improved the security situation in Pakistan. The impact of the odd once in a blue blast can be countered by proof of excellent security arrangements the Pakistani govt is providing to foreign Cricket teams. Lobbying will go a long way just like foreign players were encouraged to come for the PSL final, World 11 tour, Sri Lanka T-20 game and now the West Indies T-20 series.
 
Najam Sethi: Bringing cricket back home from exile

Najam Sethi: Bringing cricket back home from exile

Sameen Khan

Updated about 24 hours ago

At the entrance to the headquarters of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), beneath a slate-coloured winter sky, a technicolor yellow board nailed to a brick wall says: “Every team needs a hero. Every hero needs a team.” Inside, framed headshots of Pakistan’s most beloved cricketers line the hallowed halls that lead to PCB Chairman Najam Sethi’s office.

Sethi does not need an introduction. Not if you are one of the millions who have watched Aapas ki Baat, a political talk show on Geo News; he was both its anchor and analyst. Not if you are one of the thousands who have read The Friday Times, an independent national weekly paper; he is its editor-in-chief and writes its weekly editorial.

Not if you were Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in the 1970s, or General Ziaul Haq in the 1980s, or Nawaz Sharif in the 1990s. Sethi had run-ins with each of them for his activism, his publishing and his journalism. And certainly not if you are Imran Khan, who has accused Sethi of “35 punctures” – or electoral rigging in 35 constituencies of Punjab – in the 2013 general elections. Sethi was the interim chief minister of the province at the time.

If one did not know him then, one knows him now. He has been one of the most talked-about figures at the PCB since 2013. Appointed interim chairman by Nawaz Sharif, prime minister and patron of the PCB at the time, Sethi was in line to be full-time chairman but was knocked off by the superior courts in 2014 in a battle of musical chairs with former PCB chairman Muhammad Zaka Ashraf. Sethi was then made the chief of the cricket board’s executive committee while his family friend Shaharyar Khan was appointed as chairman.

This past year, his career as the sport’s manager reached a tipping point. In spring, Pakistan’s first franchise-based cricket league, Pakistan Super League (PSL), which he has been heading for more than two years now, staged the final match of its second edition in Lahore. In August, he was appointed as the PCB chairman. A month later, a World XI, put together by the International Cricket Council (ICC), played three Twenty20 internationals against Pakistan — also in Lahore. Towards the end of the year, Sri Lanka’s national team returned to play in the same city, putting behind them a terrorist attack they had suffered here back in 2009 — one that had forced Pakistan to play all its international cricket abroad since then. It was the year of Pakistani cricket’s almost decade-long circumambulation home.

“This was an egg we had to break in order to make the omelette,” says Sethi as he talks about the return of international cricket to Pakistan.

The decline in terrorism over the preceding two-and-a-half years gave him the confidence to initiate his efforts. It was the Army Public School attack in Peshawar in December 2014 – in which 144 people, mostly schoolchildren, lost their lives – that convinced him that a fight against militancy would finally begin in earnest. “If that [fight] had not happened, I would have found [cricket’s return] difficult,” he says. Even then, he adds, “it was difficult to convince the prime minister and the paramilitary forces to hold the PSL final in Lahore.”

Secondly, he says, the PSL franchises needed to agree to the idea because they then had to convince their foreign players. “[Initially], the franchises themselves weren’t convinced due to the security risk.” During the series, three of Quetta Gladiators’ first-choice foreign players refused to play in Pakistan.

Punjab’s administration also took a long time in finalising the security arrangements. As a result, the tickets could not be sold, television teams could not cover the match on time and the facilities in Dubai had to be kept on standby in case the administration said no at the last minute. And security had to be a multi-institutional, three-tiered effort. “It was a mind-boggling security plan,” says Sethi. “It was a national effort by all institutions. Nobody thought of it as just a cricket match.”

That was, according to him, only one of the many steps required to bring international cricket back to Pakistan. Step one was launching the PSL in 2016, step two was bringing its final to Lahore last year, step three was asking the ICC to send a team to Lahore and step four was bringing Sri Lanka back. Other teams said they would not return unless the Sri Lankans first said it was okay to play in Pakistan again, he recalls. “So it was critical to persuade Sri Lanka.”

They were swayed after Sethi invited the Sri Lankan cricket board’s management to the ICC World XI series.

The run-up to a successful 2017 has not been a walk in the park for him for some other reasons too. Sethi had to reimagine the PCB’s sources of income. It once received four million US dollars for a Pakistan-India match but Narendra Modi’s government put a lid on that by refusing to play with Pakistan. Other sources of income have been money from the ICC fixtures and home series, but home series have been taking place in the United Arab Emirates where profits are slim because of high costs and low gate money. He thought of holding the PSL. It proved to be an instant moneymaker.

Organisationally, too, the PCB has been a hydra-headed beast in need of taming. “I saw what happened there and was appalled. It was a den of political activity rather than cricket — and of corruption.” He says his job at the PCB is making sure money is spent where it ought to be. His economics degree from the University of Cambridge might have come in handy. “The PCB has to compete with the world. So you can’t have your standards; you need world standards. And the world is ruthless.”

Sethi’s family was not initially enthused by his cricketing responsibilities. “When he took on [this responsibility], we were not for it,” says Jugnu Mohsin, his wife and an award-winning journalist. “But because he views his life and his work politically, he said, ‘You do not understand how important this is for the self-expression of the people of Pakistan. You don’t understand what a big battle it is against extremism. This game has the capacity to enchant young people. This will entice them away from extremism.’”

Ever the analyst, Sethi sees cricket as a dimension of our nationhood. “Pakistanis are so involved in the nationalism of cricket that I would say their [cricketing] sentiment is as strong as their national identity,” he says. When it comes to cricket, “everyone is a Pakistani first and foremost”.

While he seems to have convinced his family, he did not have the same success with his peers in the media. “They could have really helped us but they chose to create stumbling blocks,” he says. Imran Khan has been another naysayer. The PCB’s chairmanship is politicised because it is a post usually ‘gifted’ by the head of the state or the government to a hand-picked favourite. Imran Khan alleged that Nawaz Sharif appointed Sethi to the post as a reward for his role in election rigging.

Sethi is no shrinking violet. “All of the drawing rooms are full of chatter. Jealousies – personal and professional – sneak into the drawing rooms but outside there is none of that. If people see something they like, they say, ‘This man has done something.’”

Sitting in his office with an expansive view of Gaddafi Stadium, Sethi says, “My most memorable moment is from this stadium. A man tapped me on the shoulder; a little boy, six or seven years old, was holding on to him. He picked the boy and said, ‘My son has never seen a stadium before … He is so struck by it. We grew up with full stadiums but a whole generation has grown up without any of this. You have opened something up for our children. This is what you have done.’”

This article was published in the Herald's January 2018 issue. To read more subscribe to the Herald in print.

The writer is a freelance journalist and founding CEO of Pershe Saeeda

Link: https://herald.dawn.com/news/1154003
 
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