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Former
Pakistan captain Imran Khan made an impassioned plea after Pakistan
was eliminated early from the World Cup for the Pakistan Cricket
Board (PCB) to be run in a democratic manner and according to
its constitution.
He
claimed that the practice of running the cricket set-up on an
ad hoc basis since 1999 and giving one person complete power
to do as he felt had destroyed the structure of the game in
the country and eventually resulted in the team’s dismal
World Cup performance.
Imran
has a strong point. It is a fact that when Pakistan reached
the final of the 1999 World Cup in England, cricket affairs
were run by an elected body and chairman. Soon after the World
Cup, former President Rafiq Tarar imposed ad hoc-ism in the
board and suspended the elected bodies. Since then, President
Pervez Musharraf, the chief patron of the sport, has allowed
this system of governance to continue.
The
result has been that Musharraf has appointed, in succession,
three of his cronies, Lt General (Retd.) Tauqir Zia, Shaharyar
Khan and Dr Nasim Ashraf, to head the ad hoc board. Twice in
their tenures Pakistan has failed to progress beyond the first
round of the last two World Cups – in 2003 and 2007.
More
importantly, Pakistan recorded its lowest test scores, 57 and
53, against Australia in Sharjah in 2002 during this period
– and the drama continues.
Clearly
there are lessons to be learnt from the debacle of the current
World Cup. Perhaps most important among these is that cricket
should be left to those who know something about it –
professionals, not government officials.
Perhaps no one on the cricket board or team realises the great
emotional attachment Pakistanis have with the sport and the
effect the team’s performance or the decisions of the
board have on the nation’s mood and psyche.
Tauqir
Zia and Shaharyar Khan failed to create any impact on the board
or bring about positive changes in the cricket system. The last
chairman of the board, Dr Nasim Ashraf, was seen as arrogant,
and the manner in which he handled (read mishandled) the Shoaib
Akhtar and Mohammad Asif doping issue made it clear that he
had no inkling of how the international cricket fraternity works.
Another case in point was the manner in which he conceded ground
to India and agreed to back the nomination of Indian board president,
Sharad Pawar, for the ICC presidentship without getting any
concessions for Pakistan in the hosting rights of the 2011 World
Cup.
But
the buck doesn’t stop there. The captain also exercised
an inordinate amount of influence on the team, which often worked
to its detriment. This was evident when last August under Inzamam-ul-Haq’s
directives, the team refused to listen to anyone and forfeited
the test match to England at The Oval. But the indiscipline
among the ranks of Pakistani cricketers is now legion. And this
in large part owes to the tendency of successive chairmen of
the PCB to get too intimate with the players, thereby not commanding
their respect or having the authority to reprimand them when
required. No other chairmen of cricket boards in the world get
as close to the players as our cricket chiefs do.
After
all his talk of how he was going to put Pakistan cricket on
the right track and how there would be no compromise on transparency
and discipline, Ashraf repeated the mistakes of his predecessors.
He made appointments to the board without following a due process
of selection, and he routinely wilted under pressure from Inzamam
and other players.
It was such an outfit and cricketing structure that Bob Woolmer
– Shaharyar’s choice of coach – had to contend
with. It is small wonder then that in the three years of his
tenure as coach, Woolmer did not achieve much. Pakistan’s
test record against the three top teams, Australia, South Africa
and England, under Woolmer was one victory and eight losses
in the 10 tests played.
Pakistan fared poorly in the World Cup because they had just
not planned properly for the big tournament. The selections
were all wrong, with Inzamam refusing to listen to reason.
One
example of the lopsided selection was that Pakistan decided
to pick leg-spinner Danish Kaneria for the World Cup just one
month after having ditched him for their one-day series in South
Africa.
Pakistan
also went into the World Cup without a reliable opening pair,
often changing the opening pair of Imran Farhat and Mohammad
Hafeez so close to the World Cup and bringing back the time-tested
failure, Imran Nazir. Pakistan also committed the blunder of
sending a team without a single left-handed batsman in the side.
The
fact is, neither our board nor the selectors or the team management
appear to have vision or acumen of how cricket today needs to
be handled professionally.
Given
the unprofessionalism and lack of planning that marked our preparations
for the mega event, compounded by Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad
Asif’s unavailability for the tournament, Pakistan’s
loss to the West Indies in the opening match should have come
as no surprise. While the defeat to minnows Ireland was unexpected,
it graphically indicated the depths to which Pakistan cricket
has plummeted.
It
also highlighted an urgent need to bring into the board professional,
educated technocrats who not only understand the game but the
requirements of modern-day human resources management. And finally,
there should be accountability of all those involved in the
game. In the absence of accountability, the rot that has set
in will continue to fester.
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