ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Cricket Board's (PCB) new interim head, Najam Sethi, on Thursday said the most important priority for the board's management committee is 'correcting' Pakistan's domestic cricket structure.
Former prime minister Imran Khan, as the patron-in-chief of the cricket board in 2019, introduced a new PCB constitution that favored regional teams and brought departmental cricket to an end. It also kept prime ministers from removing the board’s chairman at will.
Through this model, six regional teams became the only feeder for the national cricket team. Khan defended the changes, saying that he wanted to make domestic cricket more competitive. The changes also saw 400 cricketers lose their livelihoods because they had held jobs with departments only by virtue of playing for those teams. The PCB offered contracts to only 192 cricketers, apart from match officials.
On Wednesday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif constituted a 14-member management committee to supervise the PCB's affairs. He appointed Sethi as its chairman until the fresh election for the top post would be held within a span of four months. It officially ended former Test cricketer Ramiz Raja's role as PCB chairman as well.
"The most important thing for us right now is to correct the domestic cricket structure," Sethi told journalists at the PCB headquarters in Lahore. He said domestic cricket, over the past four years, had failed to provide quality cricketers to the national team.
"It seems as if the Pakistan Super League (PSL) is only supplying cricketers to the national team," he said. "Very few players have [made it to the national squad] from the domestic structure. And even if they do make it [to the national squad], then they are not provided ample opportunities," Sethi added.
He said the board had not decided yet whether it would make changes to Pakistan's Test squad announced for the New Zealand series or not.
"I wish this team had not been announced then we [new management committee] would have certainly thought about it," he said. "Maybe we would have approached it [team selection] with some new ideas. But let's see," he added.
Sethi responded to former PCB chairman Ramiz Raja's statement from a few days ago, in which he said that the city of Peshawar is a "red flag" for foreign cricketers who did not want to go there.
Sethi rejected concerns that cricket won't return to the city. "A stadium is being prepared over there [in Peshawar], I have been assured that it will be ready in six months," he said. "As soon as it is ready, we will go to Peshawar and we will play there," he added.