Jump to content

Zaka Ashraf replaces Butt as PCB chairman


1983-2011

Recommended Posts

KARACHI: The Pakistani government has not retained Ijaz Butt as chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and has appointed Zaka Ashraf to replace him. Zaka-Ashraf.jpg Ashraf, a senior banker, will take over as PCB chairman with immediate effect, replacing Butt who completed his three-year tenure on Oct. 8, PakistanÃÔ Presidency said. ButtÃÔ tenure, which began in 2008, was plagued by controversies including last yearÃÔ spot-fixing scandal in England which led to bans on players Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamir, and he was also in charge of the PCB when the Sri Lanka team was attacked in Lahore in 2009. Cricket is a passion in Pakistan with millions of people scrutinising the boardÃÔ every move and the national teamÃÔ performances. Butt returned home on Monday from Dubai after attending the executive board meeting of the International Cricket Council. http://www.dawn.com/2011/10/11/zaka-ashraf-replaces-butt-as-pcb-chairman.html

Link to comment
Don't know much about him but he MUST be nothing more than yet another close friend of Zardari... Thats the only critaria Zardari can use...
Almost like a dictatorial regime. Pak should elect Imran Khan, that way he can be president of Country and PCB on one salary
Link to comment
Almost like a dictatorial regime. Pak should elect Imran Khan' date=' that way he can be president of Country and PCB on one salary[/quote'] Despite what some deluded Pakistanis might say, Imran is a political nobody in Pakistan ( not a single seat in the parliament ) and will never be elected. All the bleating by the padosis must have given you the wrong idea that Imran has some clout in Pakistan.
Link to comment
Despite what some deluded Pakistanis might say' date=' Imran is a political nobody in Pakistan ( not a single seat in the parliament ) and will never be elected. All the bleating by the padosis must have given you the wrong idea that Imran has some clout in Pakistan.[/quote'] I am not sure about this standing but I don't think he can ever come in power, and that's not due to the public but with politics of Pakistan - the real powers wont let him in
Link to comment

Time for a new era...We will see something that we have never seen before....New Chairman saab will be followed by a New Captain,New WK,New Coach,New young Tailunted phhhhhsssst Boilers and Young beastly batsmen and eventually by the end of the year the team will will be filled with Afridi,Shoaib Malik,Misbah,Razzaqq,Akmal Bros,Y.Khan etc etc...Won't be surprised if Moyo makes a comeback either.

Link to comment

Ijaz Butt's Tenure (taken from a blog) October 7, 2008: Appointed chairman of the PCB. Our three year national nightmare begins. October 17, 2008: Ten days into his tenure, we have our first selection committee and management change. Salahuddin is replaced by Saleem Jaffer as chairman of the committee; Talat Ali steps down as team manager. A month later, the interim committee is dismissed, and Abdul Qadir is appointed to head the new committee. October, 20-24, 2008: Our first coaching change, and beautifully done it was too. On October 20, Butt tells the media he won’t renew Geoff Lawson’s contract, due to expire the next spring. Except no one told Lawson, least of all Butt; Lawson learns of Butt’s feelings through the media. Butt then tracks back slightly, saying that he “fully backs” Lawson. This happens on October 23. On October 24, Lawson is sacked. Intikhab Alam is appointed in his place in November. January 27, 2009: The first change in captaincy under Ijaz Butt. Shoaib Malik, accused of being a “loner”, is relieved of his duties, and Younis Khan takes over in all formats. February, 2009: Butt’s tiff with Miandad gets taken up by parliament. Miandad claims he was not given precise duties and responsibilities as Director General of PCB (a purely made up position). In a briefing to the Senate, Butt bizarrely claims that the PCB never actually signed a formal contract with Miandad. “I admit it was our mistake as we didn’t sign a contract with Miandad when he was appointed as DG in December,” he says. Two days later, he is asked to resign by parliament. This is the first but not the last time that particular demand is made at Butt by legislators. March, 2009: A terrorist attack takes place against the visiting Sri Lankan team. Butt deflects blame from the board, and blames the government. “Nowhere in the world does the cricket board interfere in the security matters – it’s the sole responsibility of the government,” he says. Six months earlier, he had claimed that the government was taking demonstrable steps to improve security (it wasn’t), and that he was glad the Champions Trophy was going to be held in Pakistan in 2009 (it wasn’t). Days later, Butt accuses match official Chris Broad of lying about the lax security provided to umpires and match officials. Umpire Steve Taufel backs Broad. One week after the attacks, Butt claims that he expects cricket to be back in Pakistan in “six to nine months”. That was thirty one months ago. Not one single PCB official resigned his post after the attack. April, 2009: The World Cup in 2011 is taken away from Pakistan due to security concerns. Butt in turns institutes legal action against the ICC. The case is settled four months later, out of court. June 8, 2009: Abdul Qadir resigns as chief selector, less than six months after taking the position. Reports indicate it was due to differences with Butt. Wasim Bari takes over as interim head. Less than three weeks later, the Bari-interim committee is sacked, with immediate effect. Iqbal Qasim takes over as chief selector in July. October, 2009: Younis Khan resigns as captain, largely due to differences with senior players in the team — the so-called Punjabi mafia. Butt hopes to convince him to change his mind. They meet, have a “detailed discussion” but Younis refuses to budge. Two months later, despite being fit and willing to play, and despite the Pakistan team in desperate need of middle order support on a tough tour in Australia, Younis is not called up. January 9, 2010: Jamshed Dasti, a parliamentarian, calls for Butt to resign. “”He (Butt) has gone too old,” Dasti said. “Mr Butt is physically unfit, he can’t even walk properly, he can’t even see properly.” January 31, 2010: Iqbal Qasim resigns as chief selector after the horror Australia tour. Mohsin Khan takes over a couple of months later. By some minor miracle, that is the position he still enjoys today, though he almost resigned in May, 2011. February, 2010: More pressure from parliament to resign. Javed Miandad throws in a barb for good measure, also claiming that Butt is “too old” for the job. February 10, 2010: Butt is served legal notice for defamatory comments he made about the cricket board in the U.S. He had called them an “illegal institution”. February 12, 2010: Patience in Pakistan is running thin. Imran Yusuf pens a column on Butt’s staying power, saying that “Compared to Ijaz Butt, previous Pakistani dictators look lightweight. We got rid of them all, eventually, but it seems nothing can dislodge Mr Butt” and adding that “The 80s autocrat General Zia was eventually assassinated, but nobody would ever touch Butt. There’d be no point. He’d survive a nuclear holocaust.” March 2010: Not for the last time, the specter of match fixing raises its head, with claims that at least one Pakistani player was involved in throwing games on the previous tour to Australia. Butt brushes aside the concerns, saying that the cases concern episodes from “ten or twelve years” ago. Relatedly, each of Salman Butt, Mohammed Asif, Mohammed Amir, Kamran Akmal, and Umar Akmal were on the Australian tour. In the same month, the PCB drops the hammer on senior players, banning and fining the so-called “seniors” after the disastrous tour to Australia. Two months later, all the punishments are either watered down or dropped entirely. Intikhab Alam is also set aside as coach, and Waqar Younis takes over. Mohammad Yousuf is dropped as captain, and Shahid Afridi is persuaded to return to test cricket and assume the captaincy. July 16, 2010: Afridi quits test cricket after one game as captain. Salman Butt takes over. August 11, 2010: Yet another parliamentarian, Iqbal Mohammad Ali, demands the removal of Butt. August 17, 2010: A year and a half after the incident, the PCB sends a report to the ICC on the Sri Lankan terrorist attack in Lahore. September, 2010: After the excrement collides with the fan on spot-fixing, Ijaz Butt steps it up. He first accuses England of also being a bunch of fixers, when leads to English demands that he apologize, which lead Butt to promise that he won’t apologize, which, naturally, leads to him apologizing. In his formal apology, Butt claims that “I would like to make it quite clear that in the statements which I made that I never intended to question the behaviour and integrity of the England players nor the ECB nor to suggest that any of them were involved in any corrupt practices or in a conspiracy against Pakistan cricket.” Ten days earlier, he had said “There is loud and clear talk in bookie circles that some English players have taken enormous amounts of money to lose the match [the third ODI]. No wonder there was such a collapse.” October, 2010: For the first time since being appointed, there are rumblings that Butt may be sacked. The same month, the ICC threatens to expel Pakistan if it doesn’t fix its issues. A full year after his tiff with Younis Khan began, it was settled. In the same month, Misbah is appointed captain, following Salman Butt’s legal issues. It is the ninth change in captaincy in Butt’s tenure. March, 2011: After a surprising World Cup performance, which saw Pakistan get into the semi finals of a tournament it had no business contesting, Afridi is dropped as ODI captain. He was confirmed only a few weeks before the tournament in the first place. Misbah takes over as captain in all formats. Butt claims that there are “solid reasons” for deposing Afridi but refuses to elaborate. June, 2011: Butt takes a one-month leave from his post, quite possibly the best month in Pakistan’s cricketing history. October, 2011: After having his extension reportedly “under consideration”, Ijaz Butt’s term is not renewed. He is replaced by banker and industrialist Zaka Ashraf. So, to sum up: 36 months, double-digit changes in captaincy, three coaches, five selection committees, one terrorist attack, one World Cup lost, one spot-fixing scandal, one accusation of fixing in other teams, four separate demands by parliament to resign, and zero shame.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...