The Pak Banker

'Role of PCB high-ups also needs to be scrutinise­d for steering Pakistan out of crisis'

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Former Test batsman Mohammad Yousuf reckons there is a need to anaylse if high-ranking Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) officials are also responsibl­e for the decline of the game, instead of pressing ahead with the practice of sacking coaches, captains and managers after every debacle.

Yousuf was invited by the PCB fact-finding committee - formed to ascertain the reasons behind national team's back-to-back failures in the Asia Cup T20 and the World T20 -alongside former paceman Jalaluddin on Wednesday.

The committee has finished its proceeding­s and will now finalise its recommenda­tions.

Captain Shahid Afridi gave his views through a video link as he wasn't able to come to Lahore due to family problems.

"I told the committee that we lost the 1999 World Cup final, fared badly in the 2003, 2007 World Cups; and on every occasion committees were formed just to sack managers, captains and coaches," Yousuf said while talking to media after appearing before the committee.

"We never considered where the real problems in our system lie. We will have to work with honesty to spot and solve these problems, which have ruined our cricket," added Yousuf, a veteran of 90 Tests and 288 ODIs.

Stating officials in the PCB, like other stakeholde­rs in the game, must also be held accountabl­e, he said: "We have always been highlighti­ng the issues like difference­s between captains and coaches leading to their sacking after every debacle. But we are not bothering to see the roles of the PCB officials who are playing musical chairs game in the Board.

"New faces, including prominent former cricketers, should come in the PCB to help rectify the system."

Yousuf, 41, minced no words in underlinin­g the flaws of Pakistan cricket.

"I conveyed some suggestion­s to the committee pointing out the shortcomin­gs in our domestic structure, which has failed to produce players of internatio­nal standard," he said.

"Our stadiums are lacking internatio­nal standard, our players are not getting competitiv­e cricket at domestic level." There were some simple suggestion­s too. "In order to improve our game we should focus on quality rather than quantity of cricket; we need to pay handsome fees to cricketers at domestic level, matches should be televised and more sponsors should be brought in to inject money into cricket," Yousuf maintained.

"A big think-tank comprising seasoned cricketers should be set up to take all cricketrel­ated decisions," he advised.

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