"I don’t think anything prepared me for the hostility I was going to face" : Wasim Khan

MenInG

PakPassion Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Runs
217,574
LONDON — Wasim Khan has spent his life immersed in Pakistani cricket, even as he spent very little of that life in Pakistan. To his critics, that latter bit is precisely the problem.

Wasim Khan was hooked early. As the son of Pakistani immigrants to Britain, Khan grew up listening to his father, his uncles and his cousins talk passionately about cricket late into the night. They told tales of Pakistan’s cricketing superstars, of its stunning victories, and of the huge crowds that regularly packed the dusty stadiums a world away from the Khans’ home in the Small Heath section of Birmingham, the city that served as a magnet for the generations of migrants from South Asia in 1960s and ’70s.

Khan was, and is, a Pakistan cricket fan. He was even when he started to show his own talent for the sport, a talent with the bat that earned him a place in England’s under-19 team. Even when he became the first Briton of Pakistani heritage to sign a professional club cricket contract. And even later, when he was appointed to lead the Leicestershire County Cricket Club, becoming the first nonwhite chief executive of a major professional British sports team.

So when he was offered the opportunity to run Pakistan’s cricket board in 2018, Khan had no hesitation. The lure was personal, not just professional.

“Part of the appeal of going back to Pakistan was being with your own people, the whole understanding of the place, the feeling when you get up in the morning and you hear the call to prayer,” he said.

Now, 18 months after taking on the job, whatever romance Khan, 49, had about relocating to the land of his parents’ birth to take charge of a sport that is a national obsession has largely evaporated.

Since moving last year to Lahore, where the Pakistan Cricket Board is based, he has faced an unending torrent of criticism. For the changes he has instituted. For his European upbringing. For the languages he chooses to speak, and his accent in them when he does. But mostly, as he is reminded almost daily, for not being Pakistani enough, for being an “import” doing a job that should be reserved for a Pakistani.

“I don’t think anything prepared me for the hostility I was going to face,” Khan said. “They’ve put me on the back foot right from the word go.”

Khan detailed the daily outpouring of negativity during an interview last month. How a group of board members staged a walkout, followed by a news conference in which they attacked him as an outsider, almost as soon as he had been appointed last year. How his salary was leaked and is now subject to daily debate. And how rumors continue to persist that he was only appointed because of connections to influential political figures close to Pakistan’s cricket-hero-turned-prime-minister, Imran Khan.

To underline the point, he brandished his cellphone. “Look,” he said. “This just came out today.”

The screen loads a YouTube video in which another of Pakistan’s former star players, the ex-captain Javed Miandad, launches into a full-throated assault on the cricket board, and both Khans. (Wasim Khan is not related to Imran Khan.) The diatribe lasts several minutes. Dressed in a blue tunic and sitting in a chair, Miandad fires volley after volley, excoriating Khan, his former teammate, over changes to the cricket board, including the appointment of Wasim Khan.

“Is there a shortage of people in your own country that you had to bring people from abroad?” Miandad says, his voice rising until he is almost shouting. (Weeks later, Miandad apologized for his outburst.)

Being responsible for Pakistan cricket is unlike most other similar roles in professional sports. The scrutiny runs from the office of the prime minister, through the dozens of news channels featuring frothing ex-players and commentators with hours of airtime to fill, and down to streets teeming with children playing impromptu games, mimicking the swashbuckling batting or the fast bowling of their green-shirted national team heroes.

Then there is the daily reality of managing cricket in Pakistan, which has only recently started to host international teams after a decade-long exile forced upon it after militants attacked a visiting Sri Lankan team in 2009. Domestically, Khan has become the face of a major restructuring of the professional game, a streamlining that has eliminated several teams, cost hundreds of professional players their jobs and sparked protests in the streets.

Khan shook his head as he recalled the moment a group of board members walked out of a meeting after a motion to block his appointment was not heard. The moment was captured on television cameras as the men held an impromptu news conference to air their grievances. Khan recalled receiving a frantic call from his wife, Salma, who was in Lahore, hundreds of miles away, house hunting for the new family home.

“She rang me in tears, saying, ‘You’re on every TV station right now and it’s saying you’re not going to have a job anymore,’” Khan said. “I said, ‘Don’t worry, it will get sorted.’”

Instead, it has gotten worse. In many ways, the ceaseless criticism is a function of cricket’s centrality to life in Pakistan. But it is also based in the changes to the culture of the way the sport is managed in the country.

“Do you know what the word sifarish means?” Wasim Akram, once the world’s No. 1-ranked fast bowler, asked. He was referring to an Urdu word which suggests a mix of nepotism and favoritism, which he said has long been a function of cricket in Pakistan. Ex-players, relatives of ex-players and influential political figures had for decades benefited from a system that rewarded relationships over professional aptitude.

“We need someone like Wasim Khan to come as a neutral guy, as a person who comes in and sees things differently,” Akram said. His backing was a rare public endorsement for the cricket board chief and the changes he is pursuing. Many of Akram’s former teammates, like his former captain Miandad, typically line up to outdo one another in their criticism.

The demand for such content — the commentaries are broadcast daily on dozens of news channels but also countless personal YouTube channels — is partly explained by the fact that cricket’s popularity has no rival in a country with a population of more than 200 million. Its importance is perhaps best underlined by the central role afforded to the prime minister, whose official title of patron in chief to the cricket board belies its power.

And in Imran Khan, Pakistan has one the most storied cricket players of all time at the helm. Educated at the University of Oxford in Britain, Khan was already a household name well beyond Pakistan’s borders when he played a starring role in Pakistan’s greatest sporting triumph, captaining the team to the 1992 World Cup title.

Shortly after sweeping to power as Pakistan’s prime minister in August 2018, Khan set about overhauling the sport in which he made his name.

A club cricket structure that was dominated by so-called department teams — clubs run by some of Pakistan’s biggest businesses — was replaced by six regional teams, in an effort to create a cleaner pathway for talent to the national side and also build a fan base for the club game.

While Imran Khan, in his role as prime minister, is the guiding hand behind the change, Wasim Khan has been the face of it. That has made him a lightning rod for criticism, especially after the changes reduced the number of professionals by more than a half, and led to stories of former cricketers having to suddenly turn to driving taxis and even rickshaws to make a living.

Many have blamed Khan’s foreign origins for the plight of the players.

“Wasim Khan has been imported from England, he has never lived in Pakistan, doesn’t know about Pak cricket,” one of the chief executive’s biggest critics, Mirza Iqbal Baig, a broadcaster with huge social media following, wrote on Twitter.

Khan argues that in time, the new system will yield results. Besides, he said, he had little choice in the matter: the prime minister wanted the changes, and the country’s world rankings — seventh in Test cricket and sixth in one-day internationals — suggest the existing structure is not producing the results that the country and its tens of millions of fans crave.

“If you’re telling me the competitiveness of our structure works,” Khan said, “the stats don’t lie.”

The belief that he is right, though, does little to win over the critics, especially those — like Miandad and others — who reject his authority out of hand because of his British roots.

Sitting in the corner of a mostly empty hotel restaurant in London, mulling over what has happened to him, the sadness and hurt that he has endured, Khan ruminated on a philosophical question that he thought he had resolved before trading his homeland for that of his parents.

“Where is home? That’s a good question,” he said. “I’ve been back here now three weeks and it’s been such a relief to be back and out of that caldron.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/09/sports/cricket/wasim-khan-pakistan-cricket.html?smid=tw-share
 
Last edited:
You are facing hostility cuz you're trash man
 
You are facing hostility cuz you're trash man
Weren't you the one writing long essays about how this new PCB administration (especially WK if I remember correctly) was the best thing since sliced bread?

Or am I missing something
 
You came here for the monies, stop peddling this whole drama of "being with your people". You are clueless, and have absolutely terrible decision making skills.

Who on earth puts Misbah and Waqar - the specialists in failures in-charge of Pakistan Cricket? Hell, a journalist like Najam Sethi was 10000% times better than you.
 
I don't think he will ever be accepted as a Pakistani.

Sadly the mentality of some will never allow it to happen.
 
I don't think he will ever be accepted as a Pakistani.

Sadly the mentality of some will never allow it to happen.

Doubt its about the mentality, Saj. I know that you relate with him because you both are UK citizens with Pakistani roots however thats where the similarity stops. Hes absolutely incompetent with one bad decision after the another. Had he made good choices, and the team would have been performing, no one would have dared question him.
 
You came here for the monies, stop peddling this whole drama of "being with your people". You are clueless, and have absolutely terrible decision making skills.

Who on earth puts Misbah and Waqar - the specialists in failures in-charge of Pakistan Cricket? Hell, a journalist like Najam Sethi was 10000% times better than you.

He is really good. He invested in domestic and is improving it. And sending A team to New Zealand..these are the long term changes that are needed. Wasim Khan is doing great, although the appointment of Misbah was an error.
 
He gave Misbah, Waqar, Mushtaq a golden opportunity to prove themselves. Not his fault that the coaching staff has not delivered.
 
He should have researched the organization and the cultural aspects more before joining in. There are countless articles available from different PCB management eras which would have better prepared him for the resistance to change and other such things he says he wasnt prepared for.
 
The structural changes Wasim's implemented were absolutely necessary. Where he deserves criticism is over personnel hires like Misbah, Waqar, Basit, Faisal and Razzaq.

However I don't know how people can praise folks like Sethi and Zaka who let the domestic system rot while old babas like Haroon Rasheed, Iqbal Qasim and Intikhab Alam were cashing cheques for years with zero accountability.

It's this old guard and their media buddies who are barking because their handouts for doing nothing have stopped.
 
He has to stay strong and positive.

Idiots and the envious will be wicked and vengeful. But people whose hearts are inclined that way are failures in their own lives and never amount to much! This is proven rule applicable across all fields of endeavour.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
What was he expecting? A bed of roses laid out for him?

Dude should quit moaning and get on with the job.
 
The problem is the criticism he receives is not even limited to say steps that he took that other stakeholders might disagree with in an objective way. Its just adhominem ** about where he is from, and all that. Its disgusting. the cronyism prevalent in the sports media and the nexus of ex-players and their sycophantic journalist followers is what creates a supremely toxic environment.
And as for javed miandad, greatest respect for him as a cricketer, but man just **** and stop talking. He really does seem very unstable to me.
 
What was he expecting? A bed of roses laid out for him?

Dude should quit moaning and get on with the job.

Agreed, an intelligent man like him should have no expectations of reasoned and informed opinions being formed by the morons who represent the common denominator of the Pakistani media and support base. These fools have no concept or appreciation of how organisations achieve success. These chop and change merchants should be ignored at all cost.
 
The structural changes Wasim's implemented were absolutely necessary. Where he deserves criticism is over personnel hires like Misbah, Waqar, Basit, Faisal and Razzaq.

However I don't know how people can praise folks like Sethi and Zaka who let the domestic system rot while old babas like Haroon Rasheed, Iqbal Qasim and Intikhab Alam were cashing cheques for years with zero accountability.

It's this old guard and their media buddies who are barking because their handouts for doing nothing have stopped.

Lol, why should he deserve criticism for the hires? These are the best players available. People need to wake up and smell the coffee. Unless the PCB can offer $ millions, our pay is not competitive enough to attract quality international coaches and that also in abundance. Also the Steve Rixon episode under the previous PCB administration is not going to help matters either.
 
I feel for Wasim.

He wants to lead PCB to glory. Just think he doesn’t have enough authority to do so because of the toxic culture.

Hope he overcomes all the difficulties.
 
The problem is the criticism he receives is not even limited to say steps that he took that other stakeholders might disagree with in an objective way. Its just adhominem ** about where he is from, and all that. Its disgusting. the cronyism prevalent in the sports media and the nexus of ex-players and their sycophantic journalist followers is what creates a supremely toxic environment.
And as for javed miandad, greatest respect for him as a cricketer, but man just **** and stop talking. He really does seem very unstable to me.

There is a very deep obsession with his salary and the fact that he is not a “true Pakistani” in the media. Very few people actually bother talking about the merits of PCB’s decision making and the good (or bad) that has been achieved during this tenure.

The only point that people like to discuss is that departmental cricket has ended which has hurt the country’s cricketers, but analysis of that is at a very base and simplistic level as well.
 
Last edited:
Lol, why should he deserve criticism for the hires? These are the best players available. People need to wake up and smell the coffee. Unless the PCB can offer $ millions, our pay is not competitive enough to attract quality international coaches and that also in abundance. Also the Steve Rixon episode under the previous PCB administration is not going to help matters either.

If they couldn't hire a better coach than Mickey Arthur, they should've kept him on for another year instead of hiring unproven coach in Misbah and 4 times failed coach Waqar. Andy Flower and Dean Jones were also available.

Also you can't convince me there weren't better coaches in Pakistan than Faisal Iqbal and Abdul Razzaq who were nothing more than glorified cheerleaders in the PSL.
 
Doubt its about the mentality, Saj. I know that you relate with him because you both are UK citizens with Pakistani roots however thats where the similarity stops. Hes absolutely incompetent with one bad decision after the another. Had he made good choices, and the team would have been performing, no one would have dared question him.

But I think some were never going to give him a chance irrespective of what he did or whatever decisions he made as they don't see him as Pakistani or one of their own.
 
But I think some were never going to give him a chance irrespective of what he did or whatever decisions he made as they don't see him as Pakistani or one of their own.
Such Pakistanis deserve Ijaz Butt, Sethi and Miandads with no vision.
 
It's no surprise that the dinosaurs in our setup were never going to accept him and pushback on his appointment as much as possible.

However, given the way he has dealt with things, all criticism now is fair. This regime is an absolute joke. The decisions they have taken are mind-boggling, so Wasim K is all deserving of what he's getting
 
Such Pakistanis deserve Ijaz Butt, Sethi and Miandads with no vision.

Reminds me of a few years back when Pakistan were touring England and I was attending a press conference. The PCB media buffoon said to me you can't attend as you are not Pakistani.

He soon changed his mind when he got a few choice words in Punjabi from me.

This is the type of people you are up against when trying to help Pakistan cricket.
 
Reminds me of a few years back when Pakistan were touring England and I was attending a press conference. The PCB media buffoon said to me you can't attend as you are not Pakistani.

He soon changed his mind when he got a few choice words in Punjabi from me.

This is the type of people you are up against when trying to help Pakistan cricket.

The Mirza Iqbals of the world and the so called cricket fans of Pakistan cricket really don't deserve non-******** & no-nonsense leaders like Wasim Khan & Imran Khan.

This country really just deserves Ijaz Butt, Zaka Ashraf & Sethi who have 0 professionalism & where decisions are made based on relationships rather than merit.
 
I don't think he will ever be accepted as a Pakistani.

Sadly the mentality of some will never allow it to happen.

Well decisio of appointing Misbah was pretty stupid
 
Well decisio of appointing Misbah was pretty stupid

There'll be plenty of poor decisions and good ones by him.

I think he should be judged at the end of his term, but I have a problem with those who never gave him a chance even before he joined PCB.
 
These idiots do not realise that dysfunctional organisations such as the PCB do not change overnight. Continuous and lasting changes comes with investment in people, processes and systems and controls. Commitment to new values, strategy and agenda requires consistency of senior management. It also requires tolerance for short term mistakes and failures, which the management team should use as opportunities to learn and improve.

A great leader once said that success comes from having a clearly defined target end state, define plans as to how to get there and the support of your stakeholders. If you achieve this then you can deal with short term and tactical failures (which are inevitable). Without this longer term perspective you get lost in the short term which changes from day to day. And lack of the strategic perspective and commitment means that you are judged by your short term deliverable, which given the situation your are trying to fix will most likely be define by short term failures.

Secret to success - think big, think long and think positive!
 
Guys who are having sympathy for Wasim Khan, let me remind you his decision of appointing Misbah as coach and selector was because it'll be cheaper. Yes you heard that right. Pakistan cricket is in the hands of a person who is looking for Costco discounts. Buy one get one free.


This is special level of incompetence. You actively have to work hard to reach this level of incompetence. Cannot attain it naturally. It's sad that a journalist was a better administrator than this guy. ECB must be thanking their lucky stars. Surely dodged a bullet.
 
Guys who are having sympathy for Wasim Khan, let me remind you his decision of appointing Misbah as coach and selector was because it'll be cheaper. Yes you heard that right. Pakistan cricket is in the hands of a person who is looking for Costco discounts. Buy one get one free.


This is special level of incompetence. You actively have to work hard to reach this level of incompetence. Cannot attain it naturally. It's sad that a journalist was a better administrator than this guy. ECB must be thanking their lucky stars. Surely dodged a bullet.

So who do you suggest then ? You talk nonsense sometimes bro...

Micky was kicked out by our own Misbah-ul-Haq, and if he didn’t want to do the selectors role , why didn’t he speak up?

You have the budtameez Javed opening his gob and spewing ****, when he was the coach, what did he achieve?
 
Can Pakistanis act like grown ups and criticize the performance of someone or their decisions without resorting to ad hominem attacks? We have old people attacking Wasim Khan just because he's a dual citizen born and raised in England. Pakistanis would complain about racism if the opposite happened in the west.
 
I don't think he is solely being criticized for being a foreigner.. yes we have a select few who were doing that and are still doing it but let's run down a list of WK's blunders and you will know why he is being hammered.

1. Sets up committee to assess Mickey, appoints Misbah as its head. What are Misbah's credentials to assess any coach's performance?

2. Issues a job description for coach, Misbah resigns from committee and applies for the coaching position even though he does not even meet any of the criteria listed on the job post

3. Appoints Misbah as national coach who has not even coached a club level side before. To get on the job training also makes him IU coach. This is the national team of Pakistan we are talking about where coach is learning on the job.

4. As if appointing undeserving Misbah as coach wasn't bad enough he is also made the selector when everybody and their aunt who saw Misbah's stints as captain knew how he had his favorites and hated youngsters. Stellar choice for a selector. What could possibly go wrong?

5. Wait doesn't end here. Now Mr. Foreign Import Wasim Khan comes up with another masterstroke and appoints Waqar Younis as bowling coach. The same Waqar who has failed thrice previously as coach. I wouldn't even hire an intern on my team at work who had been fired thrice before.

6. Further muddying of the water ensues and Younis Khan and Mushtaq Ahmed are also brought on as coaches. At this rate soon our support staff might grow bigger than the actual squad.

7. Folks like Faisal Iqbal and Abdur Razzaq are brought in the coaching setup in domestics. Like seriously what credentials they have to get these roles?

8. This is by far the worst mistake, and that is ZERO accountability of his poster boy Misbah. The team is going from bad to worse and Wasim Khan cannot muster the courage to call up Misbah and ask him about his shoddy decision making.


So Mr. Wasim Khan all the criticism you are receiving is fully deserved and it is not because you are a foreign import.
 
I don't think he is solely being criticized for being a foreigner.. yes we have a select few who were doing that and are still doing it but let's run down a list of WK's blunders and you will know why he is being hammered.

1. Sets up committee to assess Mickey, appoints Misbah as its head. What are Misbah's credentials to assess any coach's performance?

2. Issues a job description for coach, Misbah resigns from committee and applies for the coaching position even though he does not even meet any of the criteria listed on the job post

3. Appoints Misbah as national coach who has not even coached a club level side before. To get on the job training also makes him IU coach. This is the national team of Pakistan we are talking about where coach is learning on the job.

4. As if appointing undeserving Misbah as coach wasn't bad enough he is also made the selector when everybody and their aunt who saw Misbah's stints as captain knew how he had his favorites and hated youngsters. Stellar choice for a selector. What could possibly go wrong?

5. Wait doesn't end here. Now Mr. Foreign Import Wasim Khan comes up with another masterstroke and appoints Waqar Younis as bowling coach. The same Waqar who has failed thrice previously as coach. I wouldn't even hire an intern on my team at work who had been fired thrice before.

6. Further muddying of the water ensues and Younis Khan and Mushtaq Ahmed are also brought on as coaches. At this rate soon our support staff might grow bigger than the actual squad.

7. Folks like Faisal Iqbal and Abdur Razzaq are brought in the coaching setup in domestics. Like seriously what credentials they have to get these roles?

8. This is by far the worst mistake, and that is ZERO accountability of his poster boy Misbah. The team is going from bad to worse and Wasim Khan cannot muster the courage to call up Misbah and ask him about his shoddy decision making.


So Mr. Wasim Khan all the criticism you are receiving is fully deserved and it is not because you are a foreign import
.
Except that's not what his critics are saying, they keep calling him an "outsider" and a "foreigner", saying xenophobic stuff like jobs in Pakistan should only be for "Pakistanis" (ignoring his Pakistani origins and dual citizenship), you can't hear that stuff in civilized countries unless you're a Trump supporter.
 
I don't think he is solely being criticized for being a foreigner.. yes we have a select few who were doing that and are still doing it but let's run down a list of WK's blunders and you will know why he is being hammered.

1. Sets up committee to assess Mickey, appoints Misbah as its head. What are Misbah's credentials to assess any coach's performance?

2. Issues a job description for coach, Misbah resigns from committee and applies for the coaching position even though he does not even meet any of the criteria listed on the job post

3. Appoints Misbah as national coach who has not even coached a club level side before. To get on the job training also makes him IU coach. This is the national team of Pakistan we are talking about where coach is learning on the job.

4. As if appointing undeserving Misbah as coach wasn't bad enough he is also made the selector when everybody and their aunt who saw Misbah's stints as captain knew how he had his favorites and hated youngsters. Stellar choice for a selector. What could possibly go wrong?

5. Wait doesn't end here. Now Mr. Foreign Import Wasim Khan comes up with another masterstroke and appoints Waqar Younis as bowling coach. The same Waqar who has failed thrice previously as coach. I wouldn't even hire an intern on my team at work who had been fired thrice before.

6. Further muddying of the water ensues and Younis Khan and Mushtaq Ahmed are also brought on as coaches. At this rate soon our support staff might grow bigger than the actual squad.

7. Folks like Faisal Iqbal and Abdur Razzaq are brought in the coaching setup in domestics. Like seriously what credentials they have to get these roles?

8. This is by far the worst mistake, and that is ZERO accountability of his poster boy Misbah. The team is going from bad to worse and Wasim Khan cannot muster the courage to call up Misbah and ask him about his shoddy decision making.


So Mr. Wasim Khan all the criticism you are receiving is fully deserved and it is not because you are a foreign import.

Imran Khan said he was going to fix our cricket so he gave us this gift along side Misbah. Blame Imran not him.
 
My own gut feeling is that Wasim Khan didn't have much of a say in the Misbah appointment. Reasons being that Khan was still relatively new when Misbah was lurking in the background ready to strike once he barged his way onto the committee.

In fact, Misbah may have learned this from none other than Younis Khan when he did the same by barging onto the ODI WC team back in 2015. And who can forget his tantrums when he retired suddenly from ODI when he pulled the same stunt in the UAE.

Misbah was going to let nobody or nothing get in his way. There is talk he had other powerful backers and that is probably just as true. Khan was merely a hand to rubber stamp the paperwork for Misbah's appointment whilst keeping quiet as to not upset the mafia.
 
The structural changes Wasim's implemented were absolutely necessary. Where he deserves criticism is over personnel hires like Misbah, Waqar, Basit, Faisal and Razzaq.

However I don't know how people can praise folks like Sethi and Zaka who let the domestic system rot while old babas like Haroon Rasheed, Iqbal Qasim and Intikhab Alam were cashing cheques for years with zero accountability.

It's this old guard and their media buddies who are barking because their handouts for doing nothing have stopped.

Absolutely this. Who are these wonderkids that everyone wants the PCB to appoint? Where are they hiding? Why don't they apply for positions?

What exactly did Miandad do as a board director for years while taking a salary? Did any players come out of his coaching stints?

Pakistan has been absolutely mediocre since 2000. Now you have a guy come in, and make wholesale changes which are going to irk the old guard.

The structural changes at the PCB were absolutely needed and cultural change needed. I for one am looking forward to what comes of the new domestic structure in 3-4 years.
 
Everyone is just talking about the Misbah appointment.

First class structure had to be changed. IK’s mandate.

OK, in those circumstances, some of the things off the top of my head he has achieved:

1. Brought test cricket back to Pakistan
2. Nearly convinced England to tour Pakistan as scheduled
3. He has now increased the pay of domestic cricketers. Demonstrating that this is a priority.
4. Has removed many dinosaurs from the PCB
5. Brought in Nadeem Khan, who ran the most successful private cricket academy in Karachi.
6. Won a diplomatic coup against Bangla on the touring issue. We looked much better than them in the end.
7. Improving our standing within the ICC. WK and Ehsan Mani are on multiple important committees in the ICC. Neither Sethi nor Zaka had such influence there.
8. Improved domestic pitches
9. Improved water source problems in domestic grounds.
10. Building huge new stadium - investing in infrastructure.
11. Organizing A tours to NZ, SA, Aus
12. Attempting to create a culture of merited selection! Focussing on youth in domestic cricket.
13. He has great experience working on youth pathways. His clear emphasis is on this now.
14. Improved the quality of balls in domestic cricket

Basically, he has done a lot. He has not done even more, because COVID happened and the sponsorship deals for the cricket associations must have been delayed. Hope that he gets these sponsorship deals eventually, as then PCB will, I am sure, cleanly and sincerely spend their cash on improving domestic cricket and youth pathways further and faster.

A lot more work to be done, but really, if you get beyond thinking about ‘Misbah’, he is a much more competent administrator than we have had in a long, long time. This is objectively true surely. Definitely the most qualified, by far. And the changes I have listed above, I agree with all of them.
 
There is a very deep obsession with his salary and the fact that he is not a “true Pakistani” in the media. Very few people actually bother talking about the merits of PCB’s decision making and the good (or bad) that has been achieved during this tenure.

The only point that people like to discuss is that departmental cricket has ended which has hurt the country’s cricketers, but analysis of that is at a very base and simplistic level as well.

most definitely, in my opinion the most questionable thing so far has been the misbah appointment and that too to both roles.....i wish we'd continued with mickey. other than that i think he's done as well as was possible in the cirucmstances.
 
Everyone is just talking about the Misbah appointment.

First class structure had to be changed. IK’s mandate.

OK, in those circumstances, some of the things off the top of my head he has achieved:

1. Brought test cricket back to Pakistan
2. Nearly convinced England to tour Pakistan as scheduled
3. He has now increased the pay of domestic cricketers. Demonstrating that this is a priority.
4. Has removed many dinosaurs from the PCB
5. Brought in Nadeem Khan, who ran the most successful private cricket academy in Karachi.
6. Won a diplomatic coup against Bangla on the touring issue. We looked much better than them in the end.
7. Improving our standing within the ICC. WK and Ehsan Mani are on multiple important committees in the ICC. Neither Sethi nor Zaka had such influence there.
8. Improved domestic pitches
9. Improved water source problems in domestic grounds.
10. Building huge new stadium - investing in infrastructure.
11. Organizing A tours to NZ, SA, Aus
12. Attempting to create a culture of merited selection! Focussing on youth in domestic cricket.
13. He has great experience working on youth pathways. His clear emphasis is on this now.
14. Improved the quality of balls in domestic cricket

Basically, he has done a lot. He has not done even more, because COVID happened and the sponsorship deals for the cricket associations must have been delayed. Hope that he gets these sponsorship deals eventually, as then PCB will, I am sure, cleanly and sincerely spend their cash on improving domestic cricket and youth pathways further and faster.

A lot more work to be done, but really, if you get beyond thinking about ‘Misbah’, he is a much more competent administrator than we have had in a long, long time. This is objectively true surely. Definitely the most qualified, by far. And the changes I have listed above, I agree with all of them.

The problem is that fans want to see results on the pitch and that's why a lot can't see past the Misbah appointment which is a big stain on his leadership.

No one would bother as much about the other things if Misbah was able to deliver results. We can clearly see he's only going to bring the team down and then make endless excuses.
 
Wasim Khan's experience should be in line with mine when I first moved to Canada in 2012. Initially in the first few months, a new education system, a new country, culture, weather, attitudes towards certain subjects was entirely different to what I had grown up with. By the end of around 8 months, the initial excitement with which I wanted to experience greener pastures completely dissipated and without even me saying or requesting anything, my parents immediately sensed I was extremely home sick and ordered me to come back home for 2-3 weeks

But after a period of 6-8 maximum, everyone expected me to now be accustomed and acclimatized to my new country and life.

Similarly for WK, no matter how much research he had done, it's one thing to research on paper, based on anecdotes and behind the scenes on what living, working in a brand new country, environment is like and its a completely different thing to actually experience it all together. But surely after a period of 6-8-12 months he would now be able to adapt and develop a thick skin in the role.
 
I think he has generally done a very good job.

His clear failure has been with Misbah.

I get that Misbah was imposed upon him by the PM.

But Wasim Khan must have known what we knew - that Misbah would remove every player he could in the 21-29 age band.

So Wasim should have given clear Performance Indicators for Misbah, to ensure that he couldn't.

Just as the South African selectors have to meet racial quotas, the only way to limit the destruction that Misbah will do to any team is by introducing strict Age Quotas, so that:

1. Maximum 10% of players aged over 32.
2. Maximum 30% of players aged over 29 (including the players aged 32+).
3. Maximum 10% of players aged under 20.
4. Minimum 60% of players in any squad and in any starting eleven to be aged 21-29.
5. No player to be newly appointed captain after the age of 30.
 
Do a better job, Wasim, and you won't get so much hostility.
He has outsourced his job to Misbah who seems to be calling all the shots in everything at PCB. Then WK wonders why everybody is after him.
 
I think he has generally done a very good job.

His clear failure has been with Misbah.

I get that Misbah was imposed upon him by the PM.

But Wasim Khan must have known what we knew - that Misbah would remove every player he could in the 21-29 age band.

So Wasim should have given clear Performance Indicators for Misbah, to ensure that he couldn't.

Just as the South African selectors have to meet racial quotas, the only way to limit the destruction that Misbah will do to any team is by introducing strict Age Quotas, so that:

1. Maximum 10% of players aged over 32.
2. Maximum 30% of players aged over 29 (including the players aged 32+).
3. Maximum 10% of players aged under 20.
4. Minimum 60% of players in any squad and in any starting eleven to be aged 21-29.
5. No player to be newly appointed captain after the age of 30.


What about the appointment of Waqar?
The guy not only failed miserably 3 times but more importantly, has an absolute horrible interpersonal skills. Who recommended Waqar? I would assume Misbah had a say in it as well. If no one, then Waqar’s appointment is the height of incompetence.
 
I can sympathize with Wasim Khan on the endless personal attacks he is facing. However I am afraid this article highlights only one aspect of the criticism. We should not ignore his appointment of Misbah.

By giving Misbah the coaching gig he has made sure we do not have a positive future. How can you call yourself a professional Administrator when your first change was to appoint a guy who hardly has any experience in coaching. You add on a Chief Selector role and a PSL coaching job to that. Like please, that is one way to drop us from the rankings.

I really wanted to support you Wasim Khan. But I am sorry these decisions have put a bad taste in my mouth. The only way to fix it is to act sooner rather than later. Get rid of Misbah. Find us a better coach thats more qualified, than allow that man to build a team for the future. Let the team results do the talking. Soon you will be appreciated more than you know.
 
Last edited:
Culture issues will make sure he is always a pariah.

His Urdu accent etc will not be tolerated by our media and that is a fact.

Of course, results that Pakistan produce will also have a bearing on how he is treated.
 
He is a political appointment. He was recommended to our patron by a “friend”.

The public quickly warmed up to him because we are an emotional, gullible nation.

All he had to do was do the “I am leaving England to help my homeland Pakistan” drama and people started to look at him as some savior.

He also sold the propaganda that he was set to become the next ECB chief but sacrificed that position to help Pakistan.

Now he is surprised that he hasn’t received a hero’s welcome. He needs to toughen up and not take dumb decisions. That is all he has done since assuming office.
 
Most of the people on the board of directors etc. have a chequered past and were part of the problem and not the solution. To make it worse, they are a mafia who have no interest except self-interest.

The "constitution" or the lack of it has been an immense barrier in moving forward in terms of management related matters. Anything you do or don't do will get challenged in a court of law and there will be multiple stay orders to deal with before the saga reaches a logical conclusion (often culminating in stalemates).

The sports media of Pakistan totally operates on sensationalism with major media houses treating PCB as the extension of the government and propagate all sorts of news against it to further their own agenda.

Former cricketers are some of the most toxic people to have ever existed. All they do is spit vitriol whether it's social media or otherwise. It's also evident that most of them have no vision and parrot lines which they do not understand and live in a world that doesn't actually exist. It's literally impossible to watch their social outbursts without realizing the limit of intellect that they possess and the contradictions that they have in their thought processes.

The biggest source of income in the cricketing world comes from a board that happens to be a no-go territory and literally every other board bends over backwards to accomodate this said entity. Not only does if impact on the finances of PCB, it also makes PCB a perennial pariah in the cricketing universe and there's no sign that this status will change anytime in the near future.

Local sponsorship and interest in domestic cricket is almost negligble. There is literally zero gate-receipt money for most domestic tournaments barring PSL and possibly the T20 cup.

I maintain that the primary job of a sporting body is to create infrastructure and pathways for youth so they have a system available to them if they wish to take up sports as a professional career. The domestic system developed should henceforth be transparent and offering equal opportunity to the youth in the country whether they possess or don't possess any kind of privilege.

The international results should never be the main metric of the performance of the CEO of the board. We have won a worldcup with no system, and done well at different stages of our cricketing history with absolutely shambolic cricketing bodies.

As of now I mark Wasim Khan at about a 5/10 where the successes include

1. Good relationship with the most important board which is ECB for us.
2. Continuing the work of past managements on PSL and arranging one back in Pakistan
3. Managing to resume international cricket back in Pakistan
4. Creating professional structures & high performance centers
5. Introducing a matter of accountability in domestic cricket
6. Realizing that social media has a massive role for growth of cricket and continuing to improve it.
7. Creating a modern-looking selection system for domestic cricket & trying to reduce regional biases.
8. Women cricket

I don't give any credit to him for changing the domestic structure because it was an enforced change.

The failures so far include

1. Inability to create transparency in certain cricket-related decisions
2. The failure of cricketing committee that was supposed to fix matters
3. Appointing/recycling people in the national setup that have failed multiple times
4. Following up on the accountability measures and putting things in front of the public and stakeholders

I'm not sure how much pressure it was there to get Misbah to do the job that he was doing. I'm not even aware if that was an outside directive or if it was a decision made by the CEO or the board head on their own. I hope he is independent enough to make his own decisions and leave his own legacy whether it's a success or a failure.

It would be good to see his body of work when he has left and completed his tenure instead of being in the middle of possibly the toughest crisis (COVID) that the sporting world is going through.
 
It's sad that one extremely poor decision nullifies ten excellent decisions.
 
Btw, he confirmed in a recent tv interview that he had been offered a 3 year extension and he is most likely going to accept because he is enjoying the challenge of working for the PCB, Pakistan Cricket and feels he can make a positive difference
 
It's sad that one extremely poor decision nullifies ten excellent decisions.

That too a decision probably forced upon him. Even if it was his, in his defense Misbah is portrayed in Pakistan as a non political and not corrupted, who was a sound captain with ability to unite all players, and possessing lots of international and domestic cricket experience.
 
Last edited:
It will take time for him to completely change the structure of the PCB. Its not as simple as some would think. This will take time and a lot of dedication. Hopefully he sees it through and make's the PCB a much better run organisation and brings some much needed professionalism.

As for the Misbah appointment, that's a pretty big blemish to have on his record, but I do hope he learns from this.
 
That too a decision probably forced upon him. Even if it was his, in his defense Misbah is portrayed in Pakistan as a non political and not corrupted, who was a sound captain with ability to unite all players, and possessing lots of international and domestic cricket experience.

At the time, a lot of die hard Misbah supporters defended the decision referencing the honour and respect Misbah achieved for himself and Pakistan regardless of the results of the team and our rankings. It is now equally pathetic that these people are now hiding under a rock.

Mickey Arthur commented that he was assured by the Cricket Committee and the PCB hireups that he would receive a two year extension but IK wanted a change and recommended Misbah to be given charge.

I personally agreed with the decision to move on from Arthur. Why didn't the PCB wait to search for a proper full time coach? Some international teams go on tours without a coach or a stop gap arrangement whereas the board takes its time to hire the right candidate on a full time basis

The PCB also need to bring the salary, perks package up to international big 5 standards if they want quality applications
 
Btw Why blame WK only for Misbah's appointment? Ehsan Mani is there as well and according to the PCB present constitution, he has the final say on these matters, he has the authority to veto the recommendations made to him by the PCB Cricket Committee and WK
 
There'll be plenty of poor decisions and good ones by him.

I think he should be judged at the end of his term, but I have a problem with those who never gave him a chance even before he joined PCB.

Agreed 100%.

Plus, if you really expect perfectionism in Pakistan, I think you are in the wrong area! No leader ever took all the 'right' decisions. From Mandela to Gandhi. They all make mistakes but what's important is how they react + what's their bigger vision + what strengths they are bringing to the table + WHO IS YOUR ALTERNATIVE CHOICE OF A PCB LEADER?
 
Btw, he confirmed in a recent tv interview that he had been offered a 3 year extension and he is most likely going to accept because he is enjoying the challenge of working for the PCB, Pakistan Cricket and feels he can make a positive difference

So long contracts just like his appointment Misbah so that the board is effectively hijacked. Just fantastic. :)

And not surprised to see him being offered a 3 year extension, Imran Khan loves to keep his failures intact.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
So long contracts just like his appointment Misbah so that the board is effectively hijacked. Just fantastic. :)

And not surprised to see him being offered a 3 year extension, Imran Khan loves to keep his failures intact.
We have to wait end of IK term and end of WK contract before making judgement whether they are failures or not. Misbah forced decision excluding all the changes look good and certainly not point at being failures.
 
It’s tradition. Pakistanis love a punching bag. If you’re someone in power there’s someone out there to punch you.
 
He is facing a system of corruption and dishonesty, where nothing is black or white.

He is dealing with people who are used to being dishonest, people who are corrupt, people who are lazy, people who will not come clean and people who do not have the best interests of Pakistan cricket at heart.

Sadly the cultures are totally different, one is about doing things the right way, professionally, being open and honest, whilst the other culture is all about doing as little as possible, being sneeky and being dishonest.
 
He is facing a system of corruption and dishonesty, where nothing is black or white.

He is dealing with people who are used to being dishonest, people who are corrupt, people who are lazy, people who will not come clean and people who do not have the best interests of Pakistan cricket at heart.

Sadly the cultures are totally different, one is about doing things the right way, professionally, being open and honest, whilst the other culture is all about doing as little as possible, being sneeky and being dishonest.

This is all true BUT I am not ready to swallow that he is shocked to know about it.
He is sorta faking it, IMO.
He is not some royal prince who was born in Buckingham palace who didn’t have the foggiest of ideas as to how things work in Pakistan? He is a British desi who must’ve had a good general idea of the social norms here.

Sorry but,
When they see a lucrative job contract, all their “Pakistaniet” starts kicking in - but when they blunder and unable to handle stuff, all their “Britishness” starts to ooze out.

He has done a few good things that I agree and appreciate. But instigating the process of bringing Misbah and Waqar onboard was so horrible that it trumped everything good that he did for PCB.

Personally, I don’t want him packing. I will give him the face value and a chance to learn and fix it, BUT before he does that, he must realize that he blundered. If he is not ready to accept his mistake then two things are clear. He won’t fix it. And he will set an example that there isn’t much of difference between a desi and a British desi.

And if he brings Shoaib Akhtar onboard as a chief selector then I think, it’s not his fussiness that bothers me but he is simply incompetent and incapable of doing what he is hired for.
 
He is facing a system of corruption and dishonesty, where nothing is black or white.

He is dealing with people who are used to being dishonest, people who are corrupt, people who are lazy, people who will not come clean and people who do not have the best interests of Pakistan cricket at heart.

Sadly the cultures are totally different, one is about doing things the right way, professionally, being open and honest, whilst the other culture is all about doing as little as possible, being sneeky and being dishonest.

Agree. But what confuses me are some of his appointments - names that we may have seen before. Is he under pressure of the media lobby?
 
The positives of Wasim Khan- Whole PSL in Pakistan, SL and Bang series in Pakistan

Otheriwse new appointments in NHPC need time to need assed whether they are good enough or not. There has been no grassroot cricket since the new consitution, there has no progess so far in implementing model consitution of city cricket and club cricket. The new structure is bit like a good looking car from outside with no engine inside.
 
The positives of Wasim Khan- Whole PSL in Pakistan, SL and Bang series in Pakistan

Nothing to do with him. He is simply capitalizing on PCB’s efforts and good work from 2015-2018.

Since the Zimbabwe tour in 2015, Shahryar Khan and Sethi have been successful in hosting about 6-7 matches per year in Pakistan.

Those successful matches slowly changed the perception and alleviated some of the reservations of teams and foreign players, and that is why Wasim Khan was in a position last year to convince teams to play Test cricket in Pakistan and host the entire PSL. That would have happened last year regardless of who was in charge.

Convince players to come to Pakistan was a lot harder back in 2015-2016 than it is today. Wasim Khan deserves no credit on this front at all.
 
Mamoon, I really have a simple question for you.

Whoever is at fault here, when Wasim Khan was bought in, most folks were agreeing with his out of box thinking for the sake of Pakistan cricket and wanted to see someone who wasn’t a recycled rubbish sitting as a PCB chairman again.

Now that it didn’t work, we are bashing him? How does that even make sense.

He tired to implement a big change and just because it isn’t happening, everyone is bashing him.

Give it time guys, I’m sure he knows what to do from here.

Rome wasn’t built in one day.

Our fans seem to be so one minded at times , that they forget to focus on the good things, and always bring up the bad.
 
Agree. But what confuses me are some of his appointments - names that we may have seen before. Is he under pressure of the media lobby?

Or have we ever thought that it’s our own Misbah that recommended these names and Wasim just took his word for it?
 
Mamoon, I really have a simple question for you.

Whoever is at fault here, when Wasim Khan was bought in, most folks were agreeing with his out of box thinking for the sake of Pakistan cricket and wanted to see someone who wasn’t a recycled rubbish sitting as a PCB chairman again.

Now that it didn’t work, we are bashing him? How does that even make sense.

He tired to implement a big change and just because it isn’t happening, everyone is bashing him.

Give it time guys, I’m sure he knows what to do from here.

Rome wasn’t built in one day.

Our fans seem to be so one minded at times , that they forget to focus on the good things, and always bring up the bad.

Some are mixing up politics with what Wasim is doing - which does explain a few views.
 
Any organizational change or large cultural transformation doesn’t occur within one year. It takes many years to establish new processes, a new organizational culture and to remove bad actors, backfill those roles, re train those individuals and then move forward. Undoubtedly, mistakes are made along the way, there is no organization that doesn’t make mistakes. In the case of Wasim we feel the mistakes are larger when in fact they are just being magnified through and open and transparent process.
 
This is all true BUT I am not ready to swallow that he is shocked to know about it.
He is sorta faking it, IMO.

He knew how tough it will be as I interviewed him before he took over the job and he said it wouldn't be easy to change the mentality etc.

But he's probably realised now, that it's even tougher than he thought it would be, dealing with people riddled with laziness, with corruption, who don't believe in accountability, who don't want any responsibility, who you cannot get a straight answer out of.

As I said before it's a different culture out there, a different world to the straight talking environment in many other Western nations. Out there yes means no, no means yes and everyone is ready to blam the other.
 
[MENTION=9]Saj[/MENTION] where does Mani fit in the grand scheme of things? Not position wise, but as someone that can help Wasim navigate these issues and the culture? Is he part of the problem or acting as a blocker?
 
[MENTION=9]Saj[/MENTION] where does Mani fit in the grand scheme of things? Not position wise, but as someone that can help Wasim navigate these issues and the culture? Is he part of the problem or acting as a blocker?

I think Wasim is the one with the ideas and Mani is the link to Imran Khan.

I think Mani and Wasim are on the same page at the moment.
 
He knew how tough it will be as I interviewed him before he took over the job and he said it wouldn't be easy to change the mentality etc.

But he's probably realised now, that it's even tougher than he thought it would be, dealing with people riddled with laziness, with corruption, who don't believe in accountability, who don't want any responsibility, who you cannot get a straight answer out of.

As I said before it's a different culture out there, a different world to the straight talking environment in many other Western nations. Out there yes means no, no means yes and everyone is ready to blam the other.

On thing is certain, if you can succeed and excel in the desi culture and the chaotic world of Pakistan Cricket, you can do well anywhere.
 
Apparently Ehsan Mani has confirmed that he will not seek an extension of his tenure which is due to expire after one year and he wants to retire and spend time with his family in the UK. I wonder who will his replacement be?
 
Wasim is actually having to hide things from his own colleagues to stop them being leaked to the media.

He tested one of his employees by letting him know confidentially about something PCB was going to implement - the next day it had been leaked to the media.

What a culture, what people!
 
Wasim is actually having to hide things from his own colleagues to stop them being leaked to the media.

He tested one of his employees by letting him know confidentially about something PCB was going to implement - the next day it had been leaked to the media.

What a culture, what people!

Do you blame ex PCB chairman's for wiretapping phones and monitoring employees emails?

A friend of mine runs a textile business in Pakistan and he used to tell me that he had no choice but to monitor his employees work landlines, personal cell phones, emails because they were leaking things to competitors in exchange for payments and he reserves the right to protect himself, his business and terminating anyone caught working against his business and betraying him
 
Wasim is actually having to hide things from his own colleagues to stop them being leaked to the media.

He tested one of his employees by letting him know confidentially about something PCB was going to implement - the next day it had been leaked to the media.

What a culture, what people!

If there’s anyone who is going about their business like this, Wasim needs to give them the sack and publicly reveal the reason for doing so.

This may help deter others from leaking info to journalists.
 
If there’s anyone who is going about their business like this, Wasim needs to give them the sack and publicly reveal the reason for doing so.

This may help deter others from leaking info to journalists.

Unfortunately - this is the culture.

Contrast with ECB

When they send out a media release - they put in title Embargoed until some time - No journalist worth his salt will EVER post the news before that Embargo limit.

Can you imagine that happening in Pakistan?
 
Here's another one.

There was a recent problem within the PCB where some project was not completed. Wasim Khan asked the person in charge of the project why it wasn't complete and why he had not been told about it. That person blamed another, when the other person was asked he blamed somebody else. All in all 7 or 8 people blamed each other and took no responsibility - this is the typical culture out there that Wasim Khan has to deal with.
 
Wasim is actually having to hide things from his own colleagues to stop them being leaked to the media.

He tested one of his employees by letting him know confidentially about something PCB was going to implement - the next day it had been leaked to the media.

What a culture, what people!

Here's another one.

There was a recent problem within the PCB where some project was not completed. Wasim Khan asked the person in charge of the project why it wasn't complete and why he had not been told about it. That person blamed another, when the other person was asked he blamed somebody else. All in all 7 or 8 people blamed each other and took no responsibility - this is the typical culture out there that Wasim Khan has to deal with.

The job is tough no doubt and I have huge sympathy for him, having to deal with people who have a backward mentality and for whom logic is something completley alien. That describes a vast number of our ex-cricketers who have a sense of entitlement and are bitter for not being on the PCB pay book. I think Wasim does not get nearly enough credit for willingly coming into this mess - it's not as if he didn't have other options. The much easier route would have been to stay in England with virtually no media scrutiny with a fat pay cheque from his county. The fact that he agreed to this job says a lot about him.

People criticise Wasim for appointing Misbah, Waqar etc. However these are the same people who would have criticised him if he had appointed a foreign coach. Look at how much criticism Mickey used to get, as have all our former coaches.

I just wish that he looks past the constant abuse and doesn't give up on Pakistani cricket.
 
Mamoon, I really have a simple question for you.

Whoever is at fault here, when Wasim Khan was bought in, most folks were agreeing with his out of box thinking for the sake of Pakistan cricket and wanted to see someone who wasn’t a recycled rubbish sitting as a PCB chairman again.

Now that it didn’t work, we are bashing him? How does that even make sense.

He tired to implement a big change and just because it isn’t happening, everyone is bashing him.

Give it time guys, I’m sure he knows what to do from here.

Rome wasn’t built in one day.

Our fans seem to be so one minded at times , that they forget to focus on the good things, and always bring up the bad.

Rome was not built in a day - agreed. However, it was not build by incompetent fools either.

What smart “out of the box” ideas have we seen from Wasim?

You need smart ideas. Out of the box ideas are not enough - you will find stupid ideas out of the box as well.

Wasim has been a disaster so far, and there is no reason to expect better things in the future.
 
Karachi: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chief Executive Wasim Khan has once again requested critics to do positive and constructive criticism rather than doing personal attacks.

PCB CEO while talking to ‘Sports Room’ at ARY News said that there is no problem on doing criticism on policies.

“There is no problem in doing criticism as it is very important to evaluate cricket board’s performance but there is no need to attack on personality,” Wasim said.

“One thing, I want to clear is when one individual comes from abroad, he should feel welcome but the criticism which was being done was not on cricket,” he added.

It must be noted that Wasim gave an interview to The NewYork Times last week where he said that he faced criticism in Pakistan for just being a foreigner working for the country’s cricket.

“I don’t think anything prepared me for the hostility I was going to face. They’ve put me on the back foot right from the word go,” Wasim told American-based newspaper.

Source ARY
 
Back
Top