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Rana, Malik get one-year bans, Younis and Yousuf axed from teams

Do Pakistan bans hold the answer to England's Kevin Pietersen problem?

by Mike Norrish

England have a problem with Kevin Pietersen. He is their best batsmen but he’s scored just 69 runs in seven innings in Bangladesh. He keeps getting out to rubbish left-arm spinners and no one knows why. Perhaps it’s time for a change of plan.

One radical new approach, currently being trialled in that part of the world, eschews traditional, dated methods of rejuvenating players. Less carrot, more stick, is roughly the idea. Applied in Pietersen’s case, this approach dictates that – instead of video analysis, extra hours in the nets and counselling sessions with a sports psychologist – England should fine him, send him home and then ban him for life. Let’s call it the Pakistan Plan.

“Mohammad Yousuf and Younis Khan, keeping in view their infighting which resulted in bringing down the whole team, should not be part of national team in any format,” said today’s statement from the Pakistan Cricket Board. Less carrot, more stick of dynamite.

“Rana Naved-ul-Hasan and Shoaib Malik will be fined two million rupees. They should not be part of national team in any format for a period of one year. For the shameful act of Shahid Afridi, which has brought the game and country into disrepute, he will be fined three million rupees.” There were also fines for Kamran Akmal and his brother Umar, who, like Afridi, were put on probation.

These punishments – far more severe than many of those dished out over Pakistan’s match-fixing scandal – followed an inquiry into the tour of Australia this winter, where they were whitewashed.

Now clearly, Pakistan were bad in Australia. Dreadful, in fact. But being whitewashed Down Under is hardly unique. Ask Pietersen.

They had some decent excuses too. Pakistani cricket exists in a state of permanent exile, their players were humiliatingly (and expensively) snubbed by the IPL midway through the tour, and they are ruled over by a constantly revolving cast of bureaucratic ******** at the PCB. Plus, if Kamran Akmal could catch, they’d have beaten the Aussies in Melbourne.

It wasn’t the results which prompted the bans, though, rather the “indiscipline and infighting” uncovered by the committee. Which just makes the punishments even more bizarre. Because surely, during a tour like that, you’d bloody hope there was a bit of infighting. If the players aren’t fired up and angry while their side are getting stuffed then something is severely wrong.

But this kind of approach, remember, is not entirely without sporting precedent. Uday Hussain, Saddam’s psychotic rapist son, also used radical methods when he was in charge of the Iraqi football team. When Iraq’s players lost, or performed badly, Uday would whip the soles of their bare feet with a cane. Or make them train with a concrete football. Strangely enough, shortly after Uday was killed, the Iraqi team went and won the Asia Cup. Perhaps Uday wasn’t quite the Alex Ferguson he thought he was.

And similarly, I doubt Pakistan’s decision to ban and fine all their best players will rejuvenate the nation’s cricket team. But then again, it is Pakistan. And anything, quite literally, is possible.

Do Pakistan bans hold the answer to England's Kevin Pietersen problem? – Telegraph Blogs
 
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According to this news Salman Butt and Abdur Razzaq are strong condidates for the next captain
 
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salman butt is out of question he cant even make his place in team consistantly afridi is best canndidate for T 20 and ODI Tets i dont know
 
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It is surprising that so many are supporting sacking of Yousuf and Younis..I mean when a football club loses ,the manager has to go not any teamplayer.When a necklace loses its shine,you dont throw away the diamonds.you throw away the diamond polisher.....Hope you guys understand.Y and Y were best batsmen pakistan had after miandad, inzi and zaheer abbas..and you treat them like this???
Not Done......
 
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It is surprising that so many are supporting sacking of Yousuf and Younis..I mean when a football club loses ,the manager has to go not any teamplayer.When a necklace loses its shine,you dont throw away the diamonds.you throw away the diamond polisher.....Hope you guys understand.Y and Y were best batsmen pakistan had after miandad, inzi and zaheer abbas..and you treat them like this???
Not Done......

Sir,

You don't have to be a genious to understand our dillema---the problem is with man management---it is the management that needed to be fired---they killed their point man---only in pakistan.
 
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I think decision is f9.

Malik, Rana, Younis have no place in the team.
A good warning for Afridi, Kamran and Omer.

I think there was some unjustice with Yousaf, he dont deserve life ban.

we should also getrid with Ijaz Butt.
 
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Salman butt t20 captain :rofl:where we going with this guess all that happen to make salman butt captain this is totally absurd ijaz butt n salman butt r cousin i think hehe..shoaib malik is one best batsman proven in domistic n international the only problem with him is that he is to nice wasim bari should be hanged in public along with some other pcb officials
 
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PCB board has shot itself in the foot again as i said earlier.

Now they have virtually made more enemies than friends in the dressing room, i can only envision their demise coming out of this..

How long will the board last? only a matter of question...
 
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Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

PCB pretending to be what it isn’t

By Dr Nauman Niaz

What the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) was up to when it endorsed a six-member probe committee’s bizarre recommendations and preposterously implemented them without even deciphering the conceivable repercussions? It could have pretending to be what it isn’t, or feeling what it didn’t feel, especially of virtue, conscientiousness or intellectual dishonesty. Life bans (later promptly retracted) on Mohammad Yousaf and Younus Khan, names mentioned in the order of seniority made the critiques feel palpating the ‘idiocy’ that was attached with the decision. Were they the biggest sinners for interrupting team’s discipline, triggering its slither to disaster? Or the decision-makers were candidates to be allotted space in the department of gerontology?

Younus and Yousaf were the culprits for breaching discipline whilst Yawar Saeed, the manager during ICC Champion’s Trophy in South Africa and also Intikhab Alam, the sacked coach, were honoured. One reinstated in his previous position and the other given the ‘futuristic’ director National Cricket Academy and Game Development – blatant hypocrisy!

The PCB has become a central character in much comedy. It seems the decisions based on virtual foolishness are prevalent in more complex PCB as compared to what was ubiquitous in the past. The recent media-shattering bans and fines slapped on Younus, Yousaf, Shoaib Malik, Rana Navedul Hasan, Shahid Afridi, Kamran Akmal and Umar Akmal tend to hold mutually contradictory positions, because this implies a lack of careful analysis it indicates idiocy on PCB’s part.

Without determining the implications or logically assessing the aftermath and after an incessant though judicious bashing, most at the PCB looked like ‘Homer Simpson’, ‘Chief Wiggum’ or ‘Ren and Stimpy – they also resembled the ‘Dumb and Dumber’ Peter Griffin or the ‘Beavis and Butt-head’. The number of such people at the PCB is legion. High abilities are often linked with inanity. The claim that PCB is constantly running into ‘new’ and ‘unique’ situations that they cannot possibly be expected to anticipate and intelligently resolve is demonstrably false...the truth is that board’s top-tier is constantly repeating the same mistakes with wearying consistency and many of the ridiculous decisions could have easily been avoided or rationally manipulated. In search of stupidity is genuine, in search of management excellence turns out to be a mirage.

Had Cricket Australia taken such a decision, it would have been acceptable without a purr by the products of a genuine sports culture and also because of the fact that their board would have discovered at least three each stolid, equally flamboyant and talented youthful and well-groomed replacements, on the contrary in Pakistan with the first class cricket being less competitive and rapidly deteriorating, paucity of bench-strength and the PCB equally responsible for indiscipline and power-games, it looks like a leaf out of ‘The Dumbest Generation’ by Mark Bauerlein.

The PCB itself assembled a committee that comprised of Yawar, who was himself a stake-holder reportedly had had differences with Younus during the Champions Trophy in South Africa; how could he be asked to recommend punishments and hefty fines on the players he had been at loggerheads? Wasim Bari, PCB chief operating officer and Zakir Khan, PCB director cricket operations, were also on board depicting the mindset and presumably pre-empted designs? Third, the committee was formulated to assess the causes of the Pakistan’s humiliating defeat in Australia so how could they recommend bans and penalties on the players? Was the committee competent to assert such recommendations?

Were they only expected to ascertain the causes of defeat or go a step further? Shambolic, chaotic, insensible or rudimentary, the committee or the PCB could be termed after the media backlash? At the end of the day such punishments and bans aren’t going to change the dimensions of player power. Actually, to one’s mind, player-power is a misnomer and it is actually the powerlessness of the management and PCB administration. In absence of replacement cricketers and also their inability to identify player pathways, their failure to create a sporting culture and also to make the PCB an institution, a ban and subsequent reversal and backtracking could easily be berated. Pakistan cricket has been coerced by its own management to slip into death without a rattle; it needs reincarnation and it is now very much evident that it couldn’t be lifted back to life unless until Ijaz Butt is removed. He could be defined showing the feebleness of old age if not the constraints of his cognitive functions; though Samuel Johnson has stated in his life of Boswell (1783), there is a wicked inclination in most people to suppose older people decayed in their intellects. It seems that Mr Ijaz has a navel background; Admiral Phillip sank along with the ship, but in contrast the PCB chief is sinking and taking Pakistan cricket along with him.
 
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AFP: Pakistan great Akram slams shock bans

Pakistan great Akram slams shock bans
By Shahid Hashmi (AFP) – 15 hours ago
NEW DELHI — Fast bowling legend Wasim Akram said Thursday bans on key players for their dismal performance in Australia had made Pakistan's cricket "a laughing stock" and should be reconsidered.
Akram was commenting on the Pakistan Cricket Board's (PCB) decision Wednesday to ban former captains Younus Khan and Mohammad Yousuf indefinitely from the national side following this year's disastrous Australian tour.
In a humiliating whitewash, Pakistan lost all three Tests, all five one-day internationals and the lone Twenty20 international while touring Australia from December to February.
A committee appointed to investigate the fiasco blamed the result on infighting between Mohammad Yousuf and Younus Khan and, among other sanctions, recommended they "should not be part of the national team in any format."
The six-man panel headed by PCB chief operating officer Wasim Bari also banned Shoaib Malik and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan for one year on charges of violating the players' code of conduct.
Other recommendations included a three-million-rupee (35,500-US-dollar) fine for Shahid Afridi, who was caught by TV cameras biting the ball during the Australian tour's final one-day match, in Perth.
The Akmal brothers, Kamran Akmal and Umar, were also fined and put on a six-month probation for violating discipline on tour.
Akram, who was a member of the committee but did not attend any of its meetings held last month, said the bans on Mohammad Yousuf and Younus Khan were embarrassing.
"These penalties have made Pakistan cricket a laughing stock in the world," Akram told AFP from Mumbai, where he is on a coaching assignment.
"You don't ban players for such problems. Had I attended any meeting or given recommendations I would have suggested fines, but not bans."
The former left-arm pace bowler said Pakistan cricket could not afford such decisions.
"Pakistan cricket is in turmoil," said Akram. "We are anyway not playing (international) cricket (at home) for security reasons and this will further embarrass our players.
"No board in the world deprives cricketers of their livelihood. If there were discipline problems, it was the duty of the captain Yousuf, coach Intikhab Alam and manager Abdul Raqeeb to deal with them.
"I have been hearing Malik has been a disruptive influence since last year. If that is so, why was he kept in the team in the first place?"
He said the penalties, ahead of Pakistan's defence of the World Twenty20 title in the West Indies next month, would wreck the national team.
"Pakistan has already been weakened due to various problems and this will further hit it badly," he said. "We can't even find 11 good players because of lack of talent in the country.
He said that both Younus Khan and Mohammad Yousuf were still needed in both Tests and one-day cricket.
"What I suggest to PCB is to stick with heavy fines, but don't implement the bans because we still need Yousuf and Younus in Tests and one-day cricket.
"With the World Cup in 2011 so close, this decision will hurt our team badly."
 
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It seems like Butt got a call from the President's house leading him to reverse his decisions within hours LOL



How was But sahib appointed? Anyone has any info on that?
 
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They changed the decision about Younus and Yousef. Though I am not even sure what their fault was.
 
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