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Najam Sethi's presence at the PCB will lead to brighter days ahead for Pakistan Cricket

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It will not be an exaggeration to label the horrific events of March 2009 which saw the Sri Lankan cricket team subjected to a heinous attack in Lahore, and the darker episode of the disgrace brought on by the spot-fixing scandal as the Anni Horribiles of Pakistan cricket.

What followed was a shameful period in the history of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) as the organization charged with the well-being of Pakistan cricket was seen as being handled in a manner akin to a corner-shop. The term ‘laughing stock’ became an oft used way of describing the lack of professionalism and fiscal responsibility which seemed to be endemic at the PCB.

The problem with the PCB’s image wasn’t simply limited to affairs in the country. The ICC members' apparent apathy towards any proposals or suggestions emanating from Pakistan were an obvious sign of the downward spiral faced by the PCB. It is in such conditions that Najam Sethi, an accomplished journalist and a visionary, walked in to take the reins of an organization which was riddled with inefficiencies and where nepotism was a byword for its very existence.

Tasked with turning around the fortunes of an organization which compared to similar ones from other countries was at the precipice of financial disaster, Najam Sethi found an able partner in the likes of a seasoned ex-diplomat Shahryar Khan. The rebuilding phase of the PCB thus began in earnest as far back as 2014 and has continued since.

As is tradition in many aspects of Pakistani political and social life, the positives of any person are easily forgotten in return for some quick wins by highlighting negatives. The same has applied to Najam Sethi’s efforts in the past few years on behalf of Pakistan cricket. Thus the fact that he tried to move heaven and earth to ensure that an effort was made to restore India Pakistan cricket relations, when most other administrations in the past would have walked away and excused themselves by hiding behind some false sense of national pride, was given no importance. Nor was Sethi’s insistence on good governance in the PCB by the setting up of various committees or his insistence on examining and rectifying financial indulgences of past regimes.

But what the naysayers did not count upon were two major events that have truly established Najam Sethi’s legacy as one of the top administrators for the PCB.

In May of last year, the Zimbabwe cricket team became the first team since March 2009 to play an international game in Pakistan. The tour was arranged after intricate negotiations and had it not been for the single-minded tenacity of Sethi to pursue this landmark event for Pakistan cricket, this initiative would have fallen by the wayside as had been the case before. The reactions of the capacity crowds at the Gaddafi Stadium were testament to the joy that this tour brought to Pakistan. Granted that the security situation remains volatile but to arrange a series of this stature against all odds would have taken some organization and thankfully for Pakistan, Najam Sethi was up to the task.

Pakistan players had been suffering both financially and professionally due to non-participation in the lucrative and high-profile Indian Premier League (IPL) and opportunities in other similar leagues were limited. What was needed was Pakistan’s own version of an internationally renowned Twenty20 league and this is what the nation got in February of 2016. The Pakistan Super League (PSL) promised to give Pakistan a smile and something to be proud of and that is what Sethi delivered. Some of the world’s top players and their counterparts from Pakistan played the inaugural edition of the PSL, sometimes with the gusto reserved for their national teams. The PSL wasn’t just eye-candy, the financial gains to the PCB and its partners were immense and need no further clarification.

There were other significant gains as well for Pakistan along the way; the restoration of Mohammad Amir at international level will be a milestone to be remembered for many years to come as was the introduction of the Pakistan Cup which was received with great enthusiasm by the crowds and players alike. Pakistan’s cricket is now alive and kicking and the dark days of depression seem to be falling behind. Yes, there is plenty of work to be done as was demonstrated by our performances in the World T20 but with the appointments of Inzamam-ul-Haq and Mickey Arthur, Pakistan cricket seems to be moving in the right direction and with leaders like Najam Sethi at the helm, one can only see bright days ahead.
 
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It will not be an exaggeration to label the horrific events of March 2009 which saw the Sri Lankan cricket team subjected to a heinous attack in Lahore, and the darker episode of the disgrace brought on by the spot-fixing scandal as the Anni Horribiles of Pakistan cricket.

What followed was a shameful period in the history of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) as the organization charged with the well-being of Pakistan cricket was seen as being handled in a manner akin to a corner-shop. The term ‘laughing stock’ became an oft used way of describing the lack of professionalism and fiscal responsibility which seemed to be endemic at the PCB.

The problem with the PCB’s image wasn’t simply limited to affairs in the country. The ICC members' apparent apathy towards any proposals or suggestions emanating from Pakistan were an obvious sign of the downward spiral faced by the PCB. It is in such conditions that Najam Sethi, an accomplished journalist and a visionary, walked in to take the reins of an organization which was riddled with inefficiencies and where nepotism was a byword for its very existence.

Tasked with turning around the fortunes of an organization which compared to similar ones from other countries was at the precipice of financial disaster, Najam Sethi found an able partner in the likes of a seasoned ex-diplomat Shahryar Khan. The rebuilding phase of the PCB thus began in earnest as far back as 2014 and has continued since.

As is tradition in many aspects of Pakistani political and social life, the positives of any person are easily forgotten in return for some quick wins by highlighting negatives. The same has applied to Najam Sethi’s efforts in the past few years on behalf of Pakistan cricket. Thus the fact that he tried to move heaven and earth to ensure that an effort was made to restore India Pakistan cricket relations, when most other administrations in the past would have walked away and excused themselves by hiding behind some false sense of national pride, was given no importance. Nor was Sethi’s insistence on good governance in the PCB by the setting up of various committees or his insistence on examining and rectifying financial indulgences of past regimes.

But what the naysayers did not count upon were two major events that have truly established Najam Sethi’s legacy as one of the top administrators for the PCB.

In May of last year, the Zimbabwe cricket team became the first team since March 2009 to play an international game in Pakistan. The tour was arranged after intricate negotiations and had it not been for the single-minded tenacity of Sethi to pursue this landmark event for Pakistan cricket, this initiative would have fallen by the wayside as had been the case before. The reactions of the capacity crowds at the Gaddafi Stadium were testament to the joy that this tour brought to Pakistan. Granted that the security situation remains volatile but to arrange a series of this stature against all odds would have taken some organization and thankfully for Pakistan, Najam Sethi was up to the task.

Pakistan players had been suffering both financially and professionally due to non-participation in the lucrative and high-profile Indian Premier League (IPL) and opportunities in other similar leagues were limited. What was needed was Pakistan’s own version of an internationally renowned Twenty20 league and this is what the nation got in February of 2016. The Pakistan Super League (PSL) promised to give Pakistan a smile and something to be proud of and that is what Sethi delivered. Some of the world’s top players and their counterparts from Pakistan played the inaugural edition of the PSL, sometimes with the gusto reserved for their national teams. The PSL wasn’t just eye-candy, the financial gains to the PCB and its partners were immense and need no further clarification.

There were other significant gains as well for Pakistan along the way; the restoration of Mohammad Amir at international level will be a milestone to be remembered for many years to come as was the introduction of the Pakistan Cup which was received with great enthusiasm by the crowds and players alike. Pakistan’s cricket is now alive and kicking and the dark days of depression seem to be falling behind. Yes, there is plenty of work to be done as was demonstrated by our performances in the World T20 but with the appointments of Inzamam-ul-Haq and Mickey Arthur, Pakistan cricket seems to be moving in the right direction and with leaders like Najam Sethi at the helm, one can only see bright days ahead.

We had brighter days when zaka was incharge
Eversince Sethi came we couldn't even make it to semis in all tournaments
 
We had brighter days when zaka was incharge
Eversince Sethi came we couldn't even make it to semis in all tournaments

Not sure what he can do to suddenly improve the team's fortunes. What he can do is plant the seeds for the future which he has done.
 
I feel like they have were just tottering along but then the 2016 WT20 happened and suddenly they were jolted awake.

Appointing Inzi, Mickey and Muddasser. Holding of the Pakistan Cup, Army fitness camp and drawing up plans for school and university cricket are all commendable initiatives.
 
Currently some good steps taken by PCB and i hope this will lead our cricket in a right direction.
 
Typical "recency" effect. Last month has been good for PCB so everything Najam has been doing in the past is being seen in this light.

It was Waqar who pulled PCB by the scruff of the neck and dragged them across the line but their very public shaming and humiliation.

Imagine if Waqar had not done what he did. I bet you the committees, the old hangers on like Haroon Rasheed, Iqbal Qasim, Ilyas would still be ruling, Shahzad and Akmal and Afridi would still be in the team and lots of blame shifting would be going on.

Strange how the wrong person takes the credit.
 
Typical "recency" effect. Last month has been good for PCB so everything Najam has been doing in the past is being seen in this light.

It was Waqar who pulled PCB by the scruff of the neck and dragged them across the line but their very public shaming and humiliation.

Imagine if Waqar had not done what he did. I bet you the committees, the old hangers on like Haroon Rasheed, Iqbal Qasim, Ilyas would still be ruling, Shahzad and Akmal and Afridi would still be in the team and lots of blame shifting would be going on.

Strange how the wrong person takes the credit.

PSL and Zimbabwe were not last week....
 
PSL and Zimbabwe were not last week....

Appointment of law minister son in PSL secretariat will also define his legacy

lobbying for haroon Rashid for chief selector also define his legacy.

Making shakil sheikh head of cricket committee also define legacy

He is very shrewd person. When Pakistan losing, he try to pose that he had nothing to do with National team, he is just looking PSL.
 
PSL and Zimbabwe were not last week....
.
True. Good things those.

But... Team has regressed on his watch, so has PCB. His shameful treatment of his national team coach tells you much about his handing of his day job. India has gone nowhere and I think we should refuse to declare victory with not much to show for it.
 
Appointment of law minister son in PSL secretariat will also define his legacy

lobbying for haroon Rashid for chief selector also define his legacy.

Making shakil sheikh head of cricket committee also define legacy

He is very shrewd person. When Pakistan losing, he try to pose that he had nothing to do with National team, he is just looking PSL.

Those were his judgement calls; nothing wrong with that.
 
Some positive steps have been taken by the administration recently. Hopefully it will continue, and sometime down the line, we will see the changes bear fruit.
 
PSL would not have happened without the sincere efforts of Mr. Najam Sethi.

He must remain at the helm.
 
I wish if some one from PP had posted Najem Sethi's last interview regarding the steps they were willing to take, but couldn't take because of the complex politics that involved in Pakistan cricket.

His last interview gave you the real insight of what actually happens and the reason behind why no one could improve Pakistan cricket. Something which i think the ppers should had watched and should had learned from.

His 2 hours interview at PTV Sports, that one?
 
All political presence has to removed from PCB. It will only succeed based on merit, we need to fix the system :ik
 
Najam Sethi looks like a very capable administator who PCB should persist with. Google suggests that his primary background is that of a political commentator and journalist but that probably is the reason why he comes across as a thinker and great analyst possessing excellent communication and sound diplomatic traits. I saw a video of his responding to Pakistani journalists (after there were protests at BCCI Headquarters during his and Shahryar Khan's visit) and was very impressed by his balanced answers and overall handling of the situation.
 
Oh please, I can't hear a single good word in favour of Najam Sethi. All current steps taken PCB are taken 5 years too late. The damage has already been done. This guy Sethi was sleeping in the PCB for the past few years, all of a sudden after Waqar Yunus's post world T20 report and public pressure, PCB decided to take some steps.

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Not sure what he can do to suddenly improve the team's fortunes. What he can do is plant the seeds for the future which he has done.

For starters
Not appointing Waqar
Not removing Hafeez(all the trouble started when he was sacked and Afridi became captain see our record before that)
Appointing an agrresive captain in place of Misbah like Bangladesh did by appointing Mashrafe!
 
Sethi is an under appreciated guy. You cannot fault him for the efforts and steps he has taken for the betterment of Pakistan Cricket. Such are the problems facing Pakistan Cricket, it needs sustained good governance for a lengthy period of time before things take turn for the better
 
Those were his judgement calls; nothing wrong with that.

If you follow him closely, he never come up to face the music when national team perform poor. He goes in hiding.

Despite he is involved in all important matters as head of EXECUTIVE committee and important member of board of governors but have you ever seen him to bravely facing the mishaps. He only appear when he has to take credit
 
Here are some of Sethi's 'contributions':

1. Involved in a long-standing merry-go-round with Zaka Ashraf. How much damage did this do to the PCB?
2. Refused to talk to the head coach of the team, Waqar Younis, for close to a year. How unprofessional is that? 3. Has had a long-standing conflict of interest as a broadcast journalist and head of the PCB, yet this is not his problem..
3. Still relies on political patronage for his job! Has no real qualifications to be head of the PCB at all. Never played cricket, was never a cricket administrator.
4. PCB is still corrupt and nepotistic! He has not changed anything Hooray, he did the PSL. What about the destruction of first class domestic cricket? And I refuse to give him credit for 'trying' to set up ties with India, what came of this? No India tour and the one we had scheduled got cancelled.

No organization can work with two heads, and Shehryar Khan is clearly far more qualified and professional than Najam Sethi, who cares only about his own self-image and survival, not about Pakistan cricket.
 
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Here are some of Sethi's 'contributions':

1. Involved in a long-standing merry-go-round with Zaka Ashraf. How much damage did this do to the PCB?
2. Refused to talk to the head coach of the team, Waqar Younis, for close to a year. How unprofessional is that? 3. Has had a long-standing conflict of interest as a broadcast journalist and head of the PCB, yet this is not his problem..
3. Still relies on political patronage for his job! Has no real qualifications to be head of the PCB at all. Never played cricket, was never a cricket administrator.
4. PCB is still corrupt and nepotistic! He has not changed anything Hooray, he did the PSL. What about the destruction of first class domestic cricket? And I refuse to give him credit for 'trying' to set up ties with India, what came of this? No India tour and the one we had scheduled got cancelled.

No organization can work with two heads, and Shehryar Khan is clearly far more qualified and professional than Najam Sethi, who cares only about his own self-image and survival, not about Pakistan cricket.
called Waqar younis a liar (indirectly). He said waqar younis did that press conference against the board only because SK refused to let him continue till the end of English tour which Waqar wanted. As a result waqar went against Pcb and Najam Sethi.

And needless to say how he leaked the confidential report.

PSL is however was a very good initiative which should be applauded.
 
There have been positives and negatives with Sethi but PSL was a positive and I thank him for that. Hopefully he can help with the deeper problems of Pakistan cricket and sort them out
 
The best thing that has happened to the Pakistan from an administrative POV in a long, long time. He is the driving force behind the PSL and has brought glamor back to Pakistan cricket. In addition, he is key to bringing international cricket back to Pakistan on a full-scale.

Not surprised to see that this thread is a desert though.
 
Will he be the next full time chairman of the PCB?

Deserves to be, but as mentioned, depends on the elections. Some people suffer from Sethiphobia, and they will not consider him because of their personal vendetta even though he has done a great job.
 
Yes he does deserve credit, he took risks when other were just happy with the status quo. Easily the best administrator in PCB in recent times
 
Though I'm not a big fan of current government and everyone knows Sethi's connection with takhte-Lahore , but I always appreciate everyone who does a creditable work. PSL has been a great success and Sethi is main person running it.

Great job Mr. Sethi.
 
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