'We weren't given a chance of getting anywhere' – Jayawardene

Sri Lanka came, Sri Lanka competed, Sri Lanka injected life into the one-sided Australian summer, Sri Lanka won some hearts, but fell at the last hurdle after having restricted Australia to a below-par 231. The Man of the Series came from their side, as did the highest run-getter and highest wicket-taker. Mahela Jayawardene, the captain, admitted even he did not believe the side could fashion such a performance after the drastic changes to the setup just before the Commonwealth Bank series; but that they could not win the tournament left Jayawardene in a state of mixed emotions.”I am a hard taskmaster,” Jayawardene said. “I am quite happy and proud of the way the boys played. We were very consistent. Under pressure we have handled a lot of situations really well. Even with injuries, the guys who came in put their hands up and performed.”But we were here to get a job done, which was to win a tournament. Credit goes to the Australians because they played better cricket than us today and handled situations better. We didn’t win and because of that some of the sheen will go off the hard work we put in before.”What will rankle Sri Lanka more is that they had done well to restrict Australia, and the game was going exactly to script for them, with a target of 40 fewer than what they had smashed two nights ago at the same venue. “I thought we did really well to keep them to 230,” Jayawardene said. “They could have easily got 260. We managed to pull them back. If you had offered us a target of 230 in the morning, we would have accepted it.”The only thing we didn’t do well was have partnerships up front, which we have been consistently putting up in the entire tournament. Losing four wickets up front didn’t help the cause. When you are chasing totals, it is important to keep wickets in hand. That’s probably where we went wrong. Still, the boys fought well. Upul [Tharanga] batted really well. Thiri [Lahiru Thirimanne], [Farveez] Maharoof, and everyone got us close. There were lots of mistakes but we still came close.”This somehow has been the case for Sri Lanka in the last two World Cup finals, a World Twenty20 final, and now in Australia. Jayawardene doesn’t see a trend there. He takes heart from the fact that they are consistently making it that far. “If you take that view it can be very disappointing, in saying that we haven’t won finals. But the brighter picture is that we have been very consistent for the last 10 years or so in all big tournaments. We won the Asia Cup [in Pakistan in 2008]. Even in the last World Twenty20 we were in the semi-finals in the Caribbean. So that’s what you need from a team. Being there and thereabouts all the time, and being competitive. As long as we continue to do that we are very happy.”Jayawardene said there was nothing in particular that they were missing and that if you looked at the big picture what Sri Lanka had achieved in the CB series had been impressive given the circumstances.”It’s not that we don’t know how to win big tournaments. As a team, as a captain, I am not disappointed because when we came to Australia we were not given any chance of getting anywhere, but we showed a lot of character. In tough situations, we played some really good cricket. And it’s not easy when you have a new captain, a new coach and a new way of thinking.”Everyone responded really well. From now onwards we will try and keep building on that, and probably get all these injuries sorted out. We will work on our bench strength so we have replacements for everybody. We have to look into all those problems because we have got a lot of cricket ahead of us.”The only disappointment here has been the finals. We needed to win these big games. It would have been brilliant and all the hard work would have been worth it if we had done that.”One of the more difficult parts of adapting to the change in the Sri Lankan team would have been getting Tillakaratne Dilshan, the outgoing captain, to get into a frame of mind where he could play his best cricket. He is too good a cricketer to not make use of. Dilshan responded brilliantly with two centuries, superb fielding and tidy bowling whenever needed.”Dilly and I have a very good relationship,” Jayawardene said. “We had a good chat. He was quite happy and we had to identify a role for him in the side. He is still part of the senior group, still part of the leadership. His role is to perform freely and at the same time guide the younger guys in the side, give them the confidence.”I thought he had an outstanding tournament and will probably continue to do that. We can build a team around these leaders in the team. Kumar [Sangakkara], myself and Dilshan, we have got the responsibility to develop a team for the future.”Later this year Jayawardene, Sangakkara and Dilshan will get to play their first Test at the MCG. They have left at least some promise for those who have always been skeptical of giving Sri Lanka that opportunity. “That’s way too far away for Sri Lankan cricket [to talk about now], I can tell you that,” Jayawardene joked. “Anything can happen during that period of time. I’ve got my fingers crossed.”Edited by Dustin Silgardo

Inaugural BPL trophy up for grabs

Match facts

February 29, Mirpur
Start time 1800 local (1200 GMT)Shahid Afridi would have played two Twenty20s for Dhaka Gladiators less than 48 hours after Pakistan’s series with England ended•BPL T20

Big Picture

With so much of the spotlight on controversies, a proper cricketing final would be a solace for the inaugural edition of the Bangladesh Premier League. Thankfully, two very entertaining Twenty20 teams, Barisal Burners and Dhaka Gladiators, will go head-on in the final in front of what is expected to be a sellout crowd.Barisal have gone through a lot to finally arrive in the final, an ascent that some predicted with Chris Gayle in the line-up initially. But even though they have missed Gayle and his power-hitting since the end of the tournament’s first week, they have progressed to the title clash. One of their main strengths is the captaincy of Brad Hodge, who has stood out as a leader who can influence the proceedings with his clever tactics.Dhaka, on the other hand, rely on all-out aggression. Imran Nazir, Azhar Mahmood, Mohammad Ashraful, Shahid Afridi, and Saeed Ajmal are all attacking players who can single-handedly change the course of the final.It promises to be a game that can go either way, even if a team does score really big in the first innings. If they don’t, expect a scrappy chase.

In the spotlight

Barisal’s Ahmed Shehzad is the highest scorer in the competition after his murderous 113 off 49 deliveries in the semifinal against Duronto Rajshahi. His previous six innings in the tournament include a hundred, two half-centuries and two forties.Dhaka’s left-arm spinner Elias Sunny currently shares top spot on the wicket-takers’ list with Mohammad Sami. He played an important role in the semi-final with a double-strike in his first over – the dimissal of both Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Dwayne Smith put Khulna Royal Bengals’ chase under tremendous pressure.

Form guide

(most recent first)
Barisal — WWLWW
Dhaka — WLWLW

Head to head

Dhaka won both games against Barisal in the league phase – the first by 21 runs, despite a blistering Gayle century, and then by five wickets, a game Kieron Pollard finished off in style with a 17-ball 35.

Chatter

“Justice was finally done.”
.Edited by Siddarth Ravindran

Full transcript of Mohammad Amir interview

Shortly after his release from prison and before returning to Pakistan, Mohammad Amir gave his first interview about the spot-fixing scandal to Michael Atherton on Sky Sports. Here is the full transcriptAmir, how have you been coping with this very difficult period in your life?
It’s a very difficult time. I’m aware of that but right now I’m carrying on because I’m receiving a great deal of support from my family, and especially from my Sir (Asif Bajwa). I have support. Good people are boosting my morale and giving me courage and it is a very good thing for me that I have good people with me at this time boosting my morale.You spent time in prison, how were you treated? How did the guards treat you?
Everybody knows that prison is not a good place for anyone and nobody would feel proud to be there. But I’d like to mention that I was treated really well in there.Let’s go back now to the village where you’re from, you’re from Changa Bangyaal, a couple of hours outside of Rawalpindi. Tell us a little bit about the village, about your family, and how you first came to be interested in cricket?
I come from a village, Changa Bangyaal. It is a very beautiful village. I am from a poor family. Right from the beginning I always had a great deal of love for cricket.Although I was good at my studies, I also thought to myself that I should play cricket as well. And when the cricket team that consisted of the boys from our village used to play, I was able to play with the team that had older players. They never allowed anyone else who was younger apart from me, and that was because they considered me to be good.After this they took me to Rawalpindi. I was delighted. They introduced me to Sir. It was nets time, Sir was practising. They said to him this is Amir and introduced us.Luckily he was batting in the net. He asked them to give me the ball. I didn’t understand what the seam was; it was a very heavy ball. Since I had started, I had only ever played with a tennis ball. I’d never had a hard ball in my hands before.If I remember correctly I asked him about the seam. He explained the seam to me. Then when he batted and I bowled he said I was good, very good. Despite me being so young and the ball being so heavy he was impressed and said “fine, I’ll have him.”The academy also had a hostel and a school so I could do everything there. I said I was ready and would stay. I was happy as it gave me a possibility for my greatest dream to come true. Because I always had this dream that I wanted to play cricket, I wanted to play cricket. And I even left home to play cricket.How important was Asif Bajwa in your development; he became a mentor and a bit of a father figure to you?
You could say that he is like a father to me. He has been both my teacher and my mentor. And with Allah’s grace he will always remain so. I respect him and always will for playing a huge role in my life. I will never forget this and even now in this difficult period when lots of people desert you, he has continued to support me from the first day until now in exactly the same way as before.And even in your rehabilitation now he has continued to play a role?
Absolutely, absolutely. He told me during the last few days, he rang me and told me that he has installed nets on the roof, and he said once you are back I’ll do net practice with you. This is the kind of thing he is doing.It wasn’t all straightforward though. You had dengue fever and you suffered from two stress fractures of the back, eventually you got picked for Pakistan for the first time, tell me what it felt like when you got the sweater and the cap?
I was full of joy inside but at the same time wondered whether my dream was real. I couldn’t quite come to terms with it because when you’re so happy you can’t quite come to terms with reality. Then suddenly Sir rang me and he told me that my name was included in the team and that he was delighted for me. He told me he was going to come to the Academy straight away and that he was going to give me a big hug. The phone was red hot then and the next day was ever more joyful because they asked me to come to the National Academy for the team’s training camp.When I went there I couldn’t wait for my kit, wondering what name and what number would be on the back. We got it all in the evening. First of alI, I left all the training kit untouched because I wanted to see my coloured clothing. I saw Amir was written on it. I literally couldn’t believe that Amir was written on it and that my number was number 90.I couldn’t believe it was actually Pakistan’s kit and that it had Amir written on the back. Then I went up to the mirror wearing it like that, touching the collars, and checking how well the shirt fitted and if it was too loose or not and how it suited me, and then I turned around to see if the name looked right or not.At that time I really felt like throwing myself in submission before Allah and no matter how much I thanked him it was not enough.Ever since I had left home I had dreamed that I would play cricket, but to do so soon, within 2 or 3 years it was beyond anything I had imagined.I couldn’t believe that I was playing for Pakistan.When you were at the national academy you met Salman Butt for the first time. Tell me what were your initial impressions of Salman Butt?
When I first met Salman Butt, he was a senior player and he was a star for Pakistan and I was a junior, but he had a very good image amongst the juniors. It wasn’t that he was only nice to me, he was close to all the juniors, cracking jokes and socialising with them and being pleasant to them.When we turned up for practice, he’d give gloves to anyone who needed them, or a bat to others. He was educated, well behaved, and most of the time the seniors did not mingle with the juniors the way he did. Because of that and because he treated the juniors differently to the others, I thought he was a nice man.And clearly this friendship developed over time and you became very good friends with Salman?
Yes because we both played for the National Bank. From time to time we talked about cricket, and he told me that he’d mentioned my name to someone and told them that I was a very nice boy and that I was a very good bowler.He treated me like an elder brother treats his younger brother.It was during the world twenty20 I think in England that you met Mazhar Majeed for the first time. Again, tell us what were your initial impressions of him?
I was introduced to Mazhar Majeed by Salman. Mazhar also made a very good impression on me. He came across as a very good guy, who made jokes, the way a well-educated man and a well-mannered man would behave. He looked like a family man because I also met his wife. She wears a hijab and is religious. She says her prayers and he did too.So let’s get to the summer of 2010 then. Now prior to the Lord’s match when you bowled the no-balls, Salman Butt approached you twice about fixing, just talk us through each occasion, how he said it, and what your reply to him was?
Salman had asked me twice. Once he asked me like a joke. He was smiling and laughing and I didn’t take it seriously either. I said “no, bro”. I smiled too, and stepped aside.The second time he asked me I said to him “bro this is forbidden”. I was a bit rude to him. I said to him “this is forbidden, leave it, I am not going to do it”.Just before the Birmingham Test you took a call from a businessman you knew as Ali. Who was he?
Ali was Salman’s friend, and we had met in Dubai. I had bowled a world record while playing against New Zealand, and at that point everybody was trying to meet me and get a picture with me and get an autograph.It was at that point that he had introduced himself to me as Salman’s friend and that he knew some of the other players. I said ok and then he asked me if I needed anything in Dubai.If I did he said I should just call him. I said thank you, but it’s not necessary as we were leaving the following day for New Zealand.He then said that he was often in Pakistan, and that I should give him my Pakistan number so that he could contact me when he was there.I gave him my contact details because he was Salman’s friend I thought it would be fine to do so. When I got back to Pakistan, he rang me once or twice and we met upSo when we came to England, he called me while I was at Edgbaston and asked me for my UK mobile number and I gave it to him.And then he asked you for your bank account details at some point and you sent your bank account details to him. Then on the eve of the Oval Test there are a number of text messages that you sent to Ali which in turn read yes; yes what; for how much; but what needs to be done; it would be too much friend; so in the first 3 bowl whatever you like and in the last 2 do 8 runs. How do you explain those text messages?
Since he had asked me about my bank account details I asked him why he needed them. In response he said just give me them and I’ll tell you later what it is for.It was then that I sat waiting for someone and was bored. I was curious and I asked myself what exactly he wanted from me. I had to find out.Twice he asked me if Salman had had a word with me and then he asked me for my bank account details. Had anyone been going through what I was going through then, they would have reacted in the same way asking themselves what does he want from me? Let’s try and figure this out. That was why I had sent him these texts.At no stage, or let me ask the question differently. At any stage did you receive any money from Ali?
No, never.During the Oval test you told Salman about the fact that Ali had been bugging you and that there were certain texts that you’d sent to him?
Yes I told him. I told him on the morning of the Oval Test before fielding practice. I told him about the type of texts that Ali had been sending me and what he had asked me to do.He laughed and said that he hadn’t spoken to him about anything; that he hadn’t spoken to him at all. He laughed and walked away.Ok, so we’ve got to the eve of the Oval Test match now. In the conversations between Mazhar Majeed and the journalist, there is talk of Pakistan bowlers bowling no-balls at the Oval. Did you know anything about that?
No. I had no idea..Did you bowl to the best of your ability at the Oval?
Yes. I was man of the match at the Oval. And it was a great moment for me, because it was the first time in nine years that we had beaten England and I was man of the matchAs far as I could, I tried my best.So at the end of the Oval Test you’ve performed to the best of your ability, but you have received approaches from Ali and from Salman at this stage, again, do you regret not having informed the team management or the ICC?
Yes, exactly, I was stupid, I should’ve told someone. I didn’t have a clue what was happening to me at that point. I was on top of the world; I was performing brilliantly, everyone wanted to know me, and everybody wanted to have a contract with me.And I was lost in that world, nor had I ever considered this thing to be serious. Nor was it anywhere in my mind that I would do something like this, or that it was a good thing for me. I had never thought about this kind of thing.And had I taken it seriously then perhaps I would have gone and told the management “that these guys want to do this with me. What are they doing to me?”Anyway, I didn’t take any of it seriously; I thought it was a load of nonsenseThis led to my downfall.Ok, let’s go to the day before the Lord’s test which is August 25th. What happened on that day?
25th? I was in the hotel, I think, and I had just come out of the shower. I received a call from Mazhar saying that I should go to the car park because he wanted to talk to me about something very important. I said, ‘ok I’ll get myself ready and then come over.’Then when I got to the lift I bumped into Salman. Now, I can’t remember if it was he who told me to turn left at the signal in the car park but that is where Mazhar was.I think he did say that. So I went out and Mazhar had a grey coloured car in the parking area. I went and sat next to him in the front seat.All of a sudden it was as if someone had launched an attack. Suddenly he said ‘oh bro, you’ve got yourself in big trouble, you’re trapped, and your career is at stake.’I said “Bro, what’s happened?” He told me that my calls and texts with Ali had been recorded and had reached the ICC.I said ‘what?’ He said that he had received a phone call from a friend of his saying that my name was involved. I said, “but I have not done anything for him.”He said “nevertheless you’re trapped; your name’s being mentioned, and the case is now open.”I said, “What now?” And he said “he’s my friend and you’re lucky that he’s the one who is in charge of this case.”He said that he told him, “bro, put an end to this case, shut this file. Whatever you need me to do, I’ll do it. Whatever needs to be done, I’ll do it. I’ll do anything.But Amir’s name should not be mentioned”. I said, “And then?” That’s when he said “can you do me a favour?”I asked him what favour?He replied ‘do 2 no balls for me.’I said ‘what?!’ And here there’s something crucial that I’d like to say at this point: I’d like to say how stupid I was.I mean on the one hand he was telling me that a report about me had gone to the ICC, and on the other that he wanted me to do 2 no balls for him.My next question should have been to him “bro, on the one hand you’ve just told me that a report about me is on its way to the ICC, and then at the same time you’re asking me for 2 no balls?’I panicked so much that I didn’t even think to ask him that… what are you doing?!On one hand he had spoken about the whole ICC intelligence investigation, and on the other hand he was asking me to deliver no balls.I was panicking so much it didn’t even occur to me how ridiculous it was.I said in any case, I don’t do this kind of thing, nor do I know how to go about it.I don’t know how to bowl no balls. My front foot is always behind the line. I very rarely delivered no balls throughout my entire career.He said ‘no, no, just go to the ground and practise.’He told me that Salman would help me and that he was with me. It was precisely at this very moment that Salman turned up and sat behind us.And he didn’t say anything. All he did was to rest his elbows like that on both the seats and listened.He didn’t utter a word. The only thing that he said was to bowl 2 no-balls. I can’t remember now whether it was then or later when he told me which ones they were to be.I left the car. Then Salman remained sitting where he was.To begin with I thought,’ oh dear’. I panicked and went and sat in the bus worrying.We were on our way to practise. It was raining when we got there so we went into the indoor school. Then Salman said, ‘are you going to do it or not?’I said ‘bro, I’m very scared. I can’t do it. He said ‘don’t worry; nothing’s going to happen, bro.’I’m pretty certain that Mazhar came around in the evening? I can’t remember exactly. He said then, or maybe on the following day, I can’t remember. I think the first time he told me exactly when the no balls were to be bowled was in the car.I can’t quite remember if it was the 3rd in the 1st over, or the 3rd in the 3rd over. Anyway, that’s what he said.When the match started the next day I remember that it was raining, and I remembered that no-ball. I think it was supposed to be the 3rd ball in the 3rd over. I was churning inside, though, thinking about it and I was cursing myself.I wondered what was happening. I knew that it was cheating cricket; that it was out of order, and that it shouldn’t happen.It was a really horrible feeling. Then I thought on the other hand that are being kind to me and helping me.I thought that they are saving me and if I don’t do it, it might become a problem for me.That’s what I was thinking at the time.Then I did it.Let’s just go back to the meeting in the car, or the 25th, did he at any stage mention money to you, to bowl the no-ball for money?
He didn’t mention money at all. He didn’t talk about Mazher Mahmood, whoever he was. Whether he was his dealer or not, he never mentioned anything about itHe didn’t even tell me how much money he was spending on it, or how big the bet was to be.He never talked about any of this.And at practice, it was Salman who said to you practise the no balls and just do it, it is nothing?
Yeah.How are you feeling before you bowl a no ball?
You know, horrible. Inside I was cursing myself for getting involved in such a thingI knew it was unfair to cricket, because it is cheating. No matter how small the dishonest deed is, at the end of the day cheating is cheating.Whether it’s a no-ball, or match fixing. No matter what it is, and whether it’s the tiniest of the tiny, it’s still cheating.I thought that whatever was happening was unfair to cricket. I knew it was cheating. But I was also thinking how helpful he was being to me; that they were helping me.I was worried that if I didn’t do it, then it might create a problem for me.What I am really trying to say is that I was very confused; I couldn’t think straight. I panicked.On this day. Mohammad Asif also bowled a no ball. Were you aware of his situation?
No. I never knew anything about his situation.Ok, let’s talk about the money. On the evening of the first day, Mazhar Majeed came to your room and gave you 1500 pounds. What kind of mood was he in when he came to your room?
He was happy; he was over the moon, as happy as I am when I take a wicket. He said “you’re my little brother”. He was buzzing with excitement, like he’d hit the bullseye.He told me to keep this 1500 pounds.I said I didn’t need the money. He insisted though that I keep it anyway.He said he was very happy and that I should spend it on buying some stuff, clothes or whatever. I said no because I knew why he was happy and that he got what he had wanted that day. No-one is so naïve not to understand what the money was for.I knew why he was happy. That’s why I said I didn’t need it. He said no, no, no, you keep it. He gave it to me in an envelope.I don’t think I even looked at the money; I put it in the safe. I had 8000 pounds lying separately in an open bag. And so I kept the 1500 separate in the safe, I didn’t even touch it.That was because I knew he had made me do something wrong. And that was why he was happy and now he had turned up telling me to keep the money and do some shopping.So although you didn’t know about the deal between Mazhar Majeed and the journalist. You drew a connection between the money he was giving you, and the no ball you bowled.
Yes because of his happiness and the no-ball situation. No-one is so stupid not to realise that if he was getting me to deliver no-balls, it must be because of some sort of a bet.He must have been involved in some sort of gambling. I knew that’s why he was so happy.He must have won some money or something like that, and that’s why he’s giving me the money.Ok, let’s move to the second day, the second no-ball, did Salman remind you about bowling the second no-ball?
Yes he came to me. If you were to watch the video you can see him standing next to me. He’d come over and all he said was “you remember don’t you?”I said yes I remember. Even then I was saying to myself, what’s happening to me. It’s not right. It shouldn’t happen.But I bowled the no-ball.I was distressed; I was in a state of panic. And I was also scared inside, uncertain as to what was going to happen to me.At the same time I thought they were helping me. Although I did it, I felt the same way as I had before when I bowled the first no-ball, knowing that this was wrong. This was cheating cricket, and that was out of order.And even worse, you were in the middle of an astonishing spell of bowling, you were bowling as well as you have ever bowled?
Yes, and I’d like to mention a story here about when I came to England in 2007 to play with the under 19’s. We visited Lord’s and I told a friend that one day I’d come back and play here and give an outstanding performance.Memories of those days were rushing through my mind. It was the same pavilion where I’d made that pledge. England were the home team and Pakistan the visitors.And I remembered that moment when I’d said that to my friend that I’d return to perform at Lord’s, the home of cricket.If you perform there it boosts your image, you go down in cricket history. Those were some of my most cherished moments.At lunchtime, after the second no-ball, Waqar Younis suspected something because he asked you what was going on.
Yes. I was silent, feeling ashamed. It had been such a mega no-ball for the entire world to see.I was panic stricken. I was untying my shoe laces and suddenly he came up to me and asked me what on earth I’d just done? I was thinking “what should I say?” When suddenly Salman spoke up, which was a relief as I had no idea what I was going to say.Salman explained to Waqar that he’d told me to “go forward and bowl a bouncer”. I remained quiet, I said nothing.After the police came and searched your room, you were in the lobby of the hotel and you bumped into Mazhar Majeed’s brother Azhar Majeed. And you sent Ali a text at this point to ask him to delete the earlier text messages that you’ve sent. So at this point you are still certain that you are in trouble for the text messages that you have sent Ali, rather than anything you have done at Lord’s?
Yes because I never knew about the News of the World story. In fact I’d only really found out round about then that the News of the World was in fact a newspaper.So I didn’t know what it was; and secondly, I still had a thing in my mind that all this was linked to the ICC. The police came round, but I never thought they had any connection with Scotland Yard. I thought ICC had sent their own people over.So I sent Ali a message telling him to delete any calls and texts that he’d sent me. I was overcome with panic.I had no idea what was going on. Had I been aware, I would have rung Mazhar and asked what had happened; why the police were here; and what was going on with the News of the World.I knew nothing. The first thing I did was text Ali. I can’t remember why. I don’t know how it happened.It was beyond all comprehension. My emotions were all over the place, out of control, like when I’d taken the 6 wickets at Lord’s and felt I was on top of the world. This came out of the blue. I couldn’t come to grips with what was happening. I panicked. What had happened to me? I couldn’t understand anything.At this stage, you still don’t know about the amounts of money involved and you don’t know about Mazhar’s arrangement with the man who turned out to be a journalist?
Nothing.What was the atmosphere like in the Pakistan dressing room that morning?
Everyone was anxious because it was a shocking day for cricket. It was very damaging to the reputation of Pakistan cricket. All the media were shouting out “spot fixing, spot fixing”.Our name was being tarnished everywhere. Not just the players but also Pakistan as a country. And because of all our roots, that was more painful.It was Pakistan’s name being dragged through the dirt. So everyone was very concerned.Everybody felt the same way, even the masseur was worried.One day I was on top of the world, and the next I’d come crashing down. It was as if someone had shot me and that I simply didn’t exist anymore; that I was dead. That’s how I was feeling then.At what stage then did you realise you were in trouble for the no-balls at Lord’s and not for the text messages to Ali?
To start off with, it was in the papers. It was everywhere. The News of the World had said it and then it was broadcast by other channels that these no-balls were delivered at Lord’s etc.At Lord’s, I knew that it was due to Mazhar’s instructions to me. And in the newspapers, the people at the News of the World I think, they wrote about the entire sting operation that told in minute detail how we had acted, whatever it was.It was then I found out that it was not Ali’s incident with me, but in fact it was the no-balls that were being scrutinised in the News of the World.Did you realise at this point that you are in serious trouble?
Absolutely. That’s why I’m saying it felt like I’d been shot.My entire life was destroyed. I had begun to receive phone calls from home and for five days I couldn’t eat.To be honest for five days I got cramps, even when I was just sitting.I could scarcely swallow water. I was so worried and in such a state of absolute panic. I was overwhelmed. I felt like I wasn’t in this world anymore. The cramps were unexpected and frequent.At the end of that game you received a man of the series award in the long room at Lord’s. What were you feeling at that point because on the one hand you’ve got your man of the series award and on the other there’s this big story about fixing, I mean what was going through your mind at that point?
To be honest, since I am telling you the story of my life, at that time my security officer had wanted to take me downstairs. I had told him that I did not want to go.The reason for that was because I was so worried and so panic stricken and under so much pressure that I had told him from the start that I didn’t wish to go downstairs.He said “No, no, come with me, nothing will happen.” When I went down, everyone’s eyes were only on me. People had forgotten about (my performance at) the Lord’s test completely.Everyone was focussing on the story. So I was completely… I was thinking where I was. Once I looked up like that and considered where I’d been before, and where I’d ended up.So let’s be clear, you bowl the two no-balls at Lord’s, not for money, but because your agent and your captain had said you are in trouble because of the earlier texts to Ali and they said if you bowl the no-balls they will help you out of your difficulties?
Yes absolutely. Because everyone thinks that I did it for money. I want to clarify that is not the case.Cricketers in any case make enough money to keep themselves satisfied. So to cheat in this way is futile. It’s pointless to do such things.So I didn’t do it for money. And with the grace of Allah, no-one, not my parents, my teachers, no-one has ever taught me to behave in such a manner.Thanks to Allah, I trust myself to distinguish between right and wrong.I have never done anything dodgy, and I won’t in future if Allah is willing and this is Allah’s grace.How was I manipulated? How was I made to do a thing like this? How was I trapped? Why did those people do what they did to me? Up till now I have not been able to figure it out.However I never did it for money. And I think that if they were aware I was interested in doing it for money, they wouldn’t have created this story. They told me that I was in trouble for texting Ali and what was in those texts. And they said that ICC had managed to record them.There had been no need for these guys to make this story up.If they thought I was prepared to do such a thing they’d simply have come up and asked me. That’s why I’m so angry with Salman. He took advantage of my friendship.He used to call me “innocent one”. Like how an elder brother would speak to a younger one.And I used to respect him like an elder brother. He should have helped me instead of involving me in all this.Between the test match at Lord’s and the eventual trial in England, you continued to protest your innocence along with Salman and Mohammad Asif. Why?
Mainly because of fear; I just didn’t know what I ought to do.There was so much pressure; from the media, from everyone. From all directions all you could hear was “spot fixing, spot fixing”.And you can imagine how any 18 or 19 year old lad was feeling under those circumstances. I’d gone from the height of fame to being disgraced in such a horrendous way.Anyone going through that would panic and fail to understand the situation.Had I fully realised what had happened or had a bit more sense, I would have gone straight to the ICC or cricket board and informed them.I was so stupid. I failed to comprehend any of it.I didn’t realise that it was real and I was in serious trouble. Why didn’t I do something? I had no idea who to turn to or who to trust. Everyone was saying they could help me.What I was thinking was that the man whom I’d trusted the most, had landed me in trouble. After that, who could I possibly trust? And how could I know that person would help me?I couldn’t find the courage to talk it all through with anyone.The PCB, the Pakistan Cricket Board were trying to help you at this point?
Absolutely yes. Twice they asked me to tell them the truth. They assured me they were in a position to offer me help.They repeatedly asked me to speak the truth. But I failed to do that.How was I to tell? I was so anxious and very afraid. I wasn’t even able to confide in my family.It’s only now that my family has found out the whole story. They’ve been kept in the dark. They never knew what I went through.Eventually you did plead guilty ahead of the trial. Did you feel relieved at that point that you were finally able to tell the truth?
Before pleading guilty, when I was at the ICC hearing I was secretly beating myself up from within, thinking I’m telling lies.What was I doing? This was a complete lie. This was all rubbish. So when I came here (to England) I decided I would tell the truth.And I just couldn’t tell more lies. My decision was to stick to the truth.At the end of the day I did do it, whether it was entrapment or whatever, I did make a mistake. If I had been sensible I would have gone and told the management or gone to the ICC.I don’t know what fancy remote world I was lost in. I couldn’t understand anything.I got so famous with so many new people entering my life. You can imagine how it was for an 18 year old who was playing effortlessly and savouring every moment of my success. I had lost all sense of reality.But I told myself that I’d definitely done wrong and would accept the truth, whatever the consequences. The country’s reputation was being tarnished.I had become infamous. My family’s name was being ruined. Because of that it’s better that you tell the truth. If you know you’ve been out of order then you must tell the truth.Then I said I would plead guilty. And to be honest, when I pleaded guilty in court I had this profound feeling of relief.It was as if someone had removed tonnes of weight from me, leaving me relieved and feeling utterly relaxed.I felt light. Thank god I spoke the truth. That was a moment of extreme peace for me.You had to remain silent throughout the trial whilst others had their say. How difficult was that?
It was difficult. I remained quiet because I had done something wrong and had confessed. What more could I do?What they did was their business. What they were saying and what they were keeping to themselves.I had nothing to do with them. As far as I was concerned I had confessed.However, I stress, it was not for money.I admitted that I had made a mistake. That was the reason behind my silence. I couldn’t have said any more than that. What more could I have said?After the trial, you were led away with a handcuff on your bowling hand. You’ve talked earlier about receiving the Pakistan kit being the greatest moment of your life, was that the worst moment?
Yes absolutely. One of the greatest moments in my life was when I first played for the Pakistan team.That had been the best moment, and now when they put handcuffs on me, it was the worst. I was looking at my handcuffs and telling myself that from now on I would never play cricket again.I was crying, and saying to myself that I wouldn’t play or touch a ball again, nor would I even think about cricket.During my journey to the prison I decided at that single moment in time that from now on I would never think about cricket, nor would I play it again.That was a very difficult time for me.Do you think you deserved to go to prison for what you did?
What I can say is that I think I deserved to be punished. If you’ve done something wrong then you must receive some sort of punishment.Whenever there is any wrongdoing it has consequences.In prison you’ve had plenty of time to reflect on the events of 2010, looking back now, what lessons have you learnt about it all?
In prison the very first thought that occurred in my mind was what on earth has happened to me? How did it happen?Has it actually happened for real? It was as if I was in a daze, just having woken up and not really being in touch with the real world and its activities.Then I would tell myself that with such people, however trivial a friendship is, and no matter how insignificant the meaning of the words that friend has spoken, if those words are to lead you astray then that person cannot be a friend.He is your biggest enemy. This is the lesson that I have learnt during this time. If anyone were to tell you to do something that is even a tiny bit dodgy, it’s impossible for you to consider them your friends.They are your enemies. It is of very little importance where this happens, whether it’s an office or in the cricket world, it could be anywhere.Any person who tells you to do wrong regardless of what scale, it is wrong and therefore he is your greatest enemy.Your job is to go and tell someone in authority. For instance if you are an office worker and are being asked to indulge in devious acts, then you must go and tell the head committee of that office.In future this might have terrible consequences for your life. If you deal with a situation like I did, that is, with total stupidity, I never grasped the seriousness of what was happening.As a result, today here I am in a huge mess. This can happen to anyone, not only to someone called Mohammad Amir but it can be any youngster’s fate.It can happen to anyone. The thing to do is not to place your trust in anybody. The only person who can be considered a worthy friend is the one who stops you from doing wrong. And your enemy is the one who encourages you to do bad things.Many people think that the Pakistan team in that summer of 2010 was corrupt in a general sense. What would you say to people about the Pakistan team and your team-mates?
Of course that’s how it was reported. It was something that we had heard frequently. We got to hear things like “he is corrupt” or that a certain player is dishonest.But it is not like this at all. In the year and a half that I’d been playing regularly everyone tried their hardest. No-one at any point said anything to initiate something dodgy or to cheat.Everyone always gave a hundred per cent to win every match. Everyone was aware that respect is earned through winning matches.Everybody knows that. Who doesn’t want to be respected?People all over the world want to experience that feeling of being highly regarded. Or that they should be viewed as someone who’s tried their best.When I was part of the team that’s what drove me too. To give my best.That was the intention of each and every one of us. They wanted to do the best they could for the Pakistan team.We played to win. Everyone tried their best. But then the public’s outlook immediately became negative and that started rumours accusing players of being corrupt.You cannot make such generalisations. Just because there were a few bad people you cannot judge the whole of Pakistan or the team as being the same as them.That’s not how it is in reality.You were 17 when you first came into the Pakistan team. You were still a teenager when all this happened in 2010. Do you think that you slightly lost sight of yourself given your rapid rise to stardom and the fame that accompanied it?
Yes that’s true. And actually, the way I performed and then how it was reported, I was caught up in a world of glamour.I could not see what was right and what was wrong. New friends were becoming part of my life and almost everybody wanted to speak to me.What it meant was my way of thinking changed completely. I wasn’t even spending time with my family. I was being dragged away into another remote fancy world.Perhaps though it’s natural that anyone in my position would have been the same way.Your ability to think was numbed. You would fail to judge whether your behaviour was right or not.When you are doing so well, you don’t think logically about the bad. In cricket terms it’s like when you are winning no-one points out mistakes. Like if your technique is faulty or your wrist is wrong.No-one says a word. But if your performance is not good, and the team is losing then your mistakes get highlighted.I had been carrying on with no idea who I was speaking to and whether those people were honest or not.So you think very differently now, about friendship, about loyalty, about trust, about what’s right and wrong?
Yes. If I had done that then, then right now I would still be playing cricket.I would still be part of the Pakistan team. And there’s a famous saying that “if you learn from your mistakes then it doesn’t matter how long it has taken.”It is crucial for a person to come to his senses. At the moment I am trying to be mature, and therefore look at the world in a mature way as I do that.I am concentrating hard on how I can improve and behave in the best way possible as I mature.That is what I am trying to achieve at the moment.You haven’t seen your family for 11 months now. How have your mother and father been coping? You’ve been speaking to them on a daily basis since your release.
Yes because all parents love their children. And as for my family, no matter how much I thank them for their support, it will not be enough.Even though they have always loved me, that love has increased while I have been going through such tough times.You’ve taken responsibility for your actions by pleading guilty and you’ve spent some time in prison. There will still be millions of people, cricket fans in Pakistan who will feel let down by your actions. What message have you got for them?
I apologised to cricket fans when I pleaded guilty. I was always aware of their love and respect for the game.When fans sit down to watch a match it is with hope and expectation. They are relying on you. Just like if a country places faith in a President, they expect the country will be run properly.The same applies where fans are concerned. They look up to you in expectation that you will win.I have said sorry before and I say sorry again today. No matter how it happened and how I was manipulated to make this mistake, I can only apologise.What else can I do apart from saying sorry? Secondly, I’d like to say a word of warning for young players out there. As I’ve said before, if anyone asks you to do something wrong, you must inform the authorities.I want to stress this point. Today it’s me in this situation; tomorrow it could well be someone else.Not necessarily a Pakistani, but a player from any other country. Any youngster who could get stuck in a mess like this.I want to say there are people out there who will try and get you involved in fixing. And they don’t trap you by pointing a gun to your head.They befriend you in a way like what’s been demonstrated here with me. It’s with kindness; they’ll try and give you gifts and establish a relationship with you.It’s not written on anyone’s forehead saying that person is a match fixer or a bookie; whether they are honest or dishonest.It’s very hard to try and figure these people out. They become your friends; they try and meet you through other people you know and trust.Then eventually they succeed in trapping you somehow.When I pleaded guilty I said I was sorry. And I am going to say sorry again. I am also aware that as a result of what’s happened, cricket has been harmed.Cricket was damaged and the sport suffered. It is not just to the fans and to the entire population of Pakistan that I’d like to apologise. But also to people all over the world who watch and cherish the sport. Whether they follow on television or watch the games live.People watch the sport and follow the stars because of their love of cricket. That’s why I apologise to everyone. Because I know the game, and it doesn’t matter in whatever walk of life, whether it’s at school or not, if you don’t do things the right way then you will be punished.In the same way, if you do something out of order, your fans will express anger against you.They are bound to react. It’s because although they love you, they’ve lost the respect they had for you.That love they had turns to anger. And considering all that, I understand they are right to have those emotions.Whether its love or anger, the least I can do is to ask them for their forgiveness. I ask everyone to forgive me.I will continue to say sorry because I did do something wrong.And bearing in mind the Pakistani culture, where my situation is concerned, it hits very hard.Even speaking from just a cricketing point of view, the public has such passion for the sport that you are recognised immediately, even if you are just walking down the road.Just by thinking about that you can get a glimpse of the feeling of adulation.And from that you can see how much the sport is loved by the Pakistani public. When this happened, as the whole world found out, everyone was so angry.Particularly in my case. The way I had come onto the scene so young; and within a year Allah showered me with so much blessing.Along with that was the love I received from the people. Therefore I understand they were angry and will keep feeling that way.I apologise to them. I ask for their forgiveness. I messed up.

Siddle and Pattinson fly home with back injuries

Peter Siddle has flown home from Australia’s tour of the West Indies and James Pattinson will follow him at the conclusion of the second Test in Trinidad after both were ruled out of the third Test, due to begin in Dominica on Monday.Pattinson and Siddle, team-mates for club, state and country, have both complained of back trouble in the past week. Siddle’s was at first described as “back stiffness” and emerged as he played in the first Test in Barbados, quickly ruling him out of the second.He and the rested Ryan Harris were replaced as fast bowlers for the second match by Pattinson, who was playing his first Test since he suffered a foot stress injury during the second Test against India at the SCG in January. However Pattinson struggled for rhythm and left the field on the third afternoon following a throw from the outfield.Siddle was not considered for Australia’s ODI team following his Test match success against India as the national selectors wished to retain his full and aggressive style for the game’s longest form, while also keeping him fresher physically. Australia’s captain Michael Clarke said the loss of Siddle and Pattinson would be difficult to cover, but was glad Harris had been left in reserve alongside Mitchell Starc.”Disappointing we lose two very good bowlers,” Clarke said. “But Mitchell Starc comes into contention now as one of our fast bowlers or we have the option to play two spinners again. Ryan Harris freshens up, doesn’t play this Test and he’s fresh and ready to go for the next Test. We’ve still got some options, it’s just about looking at conditions when we get there and see what our best attack is.”Clarke said Pattinson had shown no signs of discomfort until he threw while off balance in the field and immediately complained of back stiffness. “No back issues until he did that,” Clarke said. “I walked up to him and asked how you going and he said ‘I’m a little bit stiff’, told him to go and see the physio and it didn’t get much better from there. He was still stiff the next morning, had a scan and we didn’t get the results until late last night.”Got those results and the decision was made this morning on what his plans were because it’s more positive than negative. Obviously it’s disappointing that he’s not going to be available for the third Test but the reality is, if he’s not going to be fit for the third Test, our best option for both him and Peter is to put them on a plane and get them home and get them stuck into treatment ASAP so they’re fit for our next tour.”Australia’s physio on tour, Kevin Sims, said Siddle’s scans had shown a “low back bone stress injury” while Pattinson’s “acute low back pain” will require further diagnosis on his return to Australia.”Peter Siddle developed some back soreness late in the first Test against the West Indies and scans conducted in Trinidad showed the early signs of a low back bone stress injury,” Sims said. “He was subsequently ruled out of the second Test.”After further consultation we feel that to prevent this injury developing any further it is in Peter’s best interest for him to return to Australia to rest and for appropriate physiotherapy to ensure he is fully fit when next selected for Australian duties.”James Pattinson had an episode of acute low back pain after fielding and throwing awkwardly late on day three of the second Test. We have since monitored his condition over the last couple of days and the initial investigations suggest that while the injury is not serious there is insufficient time for him to recover to play in the third Test match.”As such, we have today made the decision for James to return to Australia to prevent this injury developing any further and for him to receive the appropriate medical and physiotherapy management.”Neither bowler will be replaced on tour, leaving Ben Hilfenhaus, Harris and Starc as Australia’s only available pacemen for the third Test.

Eight Test players in training squad for Indian tournament

Bangladesh’s selectors have picked eight players with Test experience in a 28-member A squad that will attend a training camp on June 25 to prepare for the Shafi Dharshah Trophy in India next month.Shahriar Nafees, Imrul Kayes, Nazimuddin, Naeem Islam, Raqibul Hasan, Enamul Haque jr, Shahadat Hossain and Robiul Islam will join the non-Test players at the camp at the Shere Bangla Stadium in Mirpur.Bangladesh A and Sri Lanka A are the two foreign sides in the tournament that will be staged in Bangalore and Mysore. They will compete against top teams from India’s domestic first-class competition, the Ranji Trophy, including the champions Rajasthan. The final will be held on August 16.Stuart Barnes, the former Gloucestershire fast bowler, will accompany Bangladesh A as head coach for the tournament. Bangladesh A lost the unofficial Test and one-day series against West Indies A in November last year. However, they beat England Lions 3-2 in a one-day series and drew the Twenty20 series in January.Preliminary Squad: Shahriar Nafees, Nasiruddin Faruque, Imrul Kayes, Nazimuddin, Mominul Haque, Naeem Islam, Shamsur Rahman, Farhad Hossain, Marshall Ayub, Rokibul Hasan, Mahmudul Hasan, Shuvagata Hom Chowdhury, Mohammad Mithun, Dhiman Ghosh, Saqlain Sajeeb, Arafat Sunny, Enamul Haque, Mosharraf Hossain, Sohag Gazi, Shahadat Hossain, Robiul Islam, Mukhtar Ali, Alauddin Babu, Al Amin, Shabbir Rahman, Dollar Mahmud, Kazi Kamrul Islam, Tasamul Hoque.

Kids shouldn't 'sell themselves short' with T20 – Dravid

Young cricketers today have the option to become rich, successful cricketers without even aspiring to play Tests, but Rahul Dravid has urged them to “not sell themselves short” because he feels there is no match for the satisfaction that can be derived from playing Test cricket. He was quick to add that he didn’t want to judge them on or blame them for their choices but that he wanted to challenge them to give Test cricket a fair go.Dravid was speaking at the launch of the book , an anthology of some of the best writings on him, published by ESPNcricinfo and Walt Disney. The book is a collection of 30 pieces, some new and some previously published; the writers include cricketers (Ed Smith, Jason Gillespie, Greg Chappell, Sanjay Manjrekar) and well-known cricket writers (Rohit Brijnath, Gideon Haigh, Rahul Bhattacharya, Suresh Menon).”There are more options now,” Dravid said of the quandary cricket faces. “Very hard for me to be judgemental about kids of today. Unfair. I had gone through a commerce degree in college, and not very successfully. When I grew up, if I wanted to be a successful professional cricketer – and making a living out of the sport became a part of that – the only option for me was to be a successful Test cricketer. There was no other way in which you could make a professional living out of the sport. I would have still played it, but I would have probably looked to do something else professionally if I wasn’t good enough.”Dravid said he could understand the lure of the other options. “People now have the option of not necessarily playing Test cricket but making a living out of the game,” he said. “And, you know, who’s to blame kids for taking that option? Who’s to blame kids for using that opportunity if they feel they are not good enough for Test cricket? If they are not good enough for Test cricket, I am sure they will feel, ‘Look at least I needn’t make a living out of this game. Let me at least play this, which is giving me money.'”I won’t like to judge them on that, but I will like to challenge them. What I’ll like to tell young kids is that the greatest satisfaction you are going to get is by playing Test cricket and playing in some of these great stadiums of the world. That will give you the greatest personal satisfaction, so don’t sell yourself short. Try and achieve. It is possible. It can be done. There might be kids in this era who will take that soft option. Some won’t. We will be able to see in time. Every era there have been people who have fallen by the wayside.”When asked if he saw enough players coming in who were desperate to play Test cricket, Dravid said it was not a concern right now but one that will confront cricket soon enough. “People like Rohit Sharma, Suresh Raina, Manoj Tiwary, or whoever the youngsters are, have grown up watching and idolising Test cricket,” he said. “It’s the kids like Samit [Dravid’s son, 7] who will have grown up watching the IPL. That will be the challenge. What will those kids want? I don’t see this as an immediate problem. I see it as a long-term issue.”By long term I mean ten years, when those kind of kids grow up, what will their aspirations be? If one of the young kinds wants to play, will he want to play for a franchise? You have to understand that at the end of the day players are also performers, and they want to perform. When you look at the IPL, it’s a great stage to perform. Played in front of full stadiums, there is a great viewership on television, you are playing with some of the best players in the world, you are playing at some of the greatest stadiums in the country… It’s a great stage to perform. That challenge is going to arise in ten years’ time, and I think we have got to address it right now.”

MCA president Vilasrao Deshmukh dies aged 67

Vilasrao Deshmukh, the former Maharashtra chief minister and president of the Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA), has died aged 67 in Chennai following multiple organ failure. Deshmukh was also serving as a minister for science and technology in the federal government.Deshmukh was nominated MCA president in July 2011, edging out the former India batsman Dilip Vengsarkar in the elections. It continued the two-decade long trend of a politician heading the body. He had earlier served as the vice-president of the body from 2009-11 and was also chairman of the BCCI’s Media Committee for 2011-12.Deshmukh was in charge of the MCA when it banned Shah Rukh Khan, the Kolkata Knight Riders owner, from entering Wankhede Stadium for five years as a result of his scuffle with security guards after the game between Knight Riders and Mumbai Indians on May 16 this year.”Mr Deshmukh, even when he was not an office bearer of Mumbai Cricket Association, was always there to help Mumbai Cricket Association whether it was the setting up of the MCA Recreation Centre or the redevelopment of the Wankhede Stadium,” Prof Ratnakar Shetty, vice-president of the MCA, said.

Asif to pursue appeal against ICC ban

Mohammad Asif, the Pakistan seamer, has said he would pursue an appeal against the seven-year ban imposed on him by the ICC for spot-fixing. The ban (the last two years of which are suspended) was imposed on him for accepting money to bowl no-balls in the Lord’s Test against England in 2010.”I had filed the appeal when I was banned by the ICC (in February 2011) and now I have decided to pursue my appeal through my counsel Ravi Gill and hope that a date is given to me very soon,” Asif told .In November, 2011, he was sentenced to one year in prison by the Southwark Crown Court for cheating and conspiracy due to the same. Although he was released in May after serving half of the term, he has yet to return to Pakistan. Team-mates Mohammad Amir and Salman Butt, both of whom have been released, were sentenced for six months and 30 months respectively.Asif played 23 Tests, claiming 106 wickets at an average of 24.36, before his career was cut short due to the criminal proceedings. He said his appeal against the ban in the Switzerland-based Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) had been put on hold due to the criminal proceedings against him in England.He said he had participated in a club match on Monday, and was practicing hard to bring his career back on track.”I hope that I will get a fair result from the CAS and then hopefully able to revive my career,” Asif said.”If I don’t get an early date then I will return to Pakistan and whenever I get a date then I will go to Switzerland. It has been a tough period, without cricket and away from home but I am sure it’s going to be over soon.”

India's home ministry clears Pakistan tour

India’s home ministry has cleared a limited-overs tour by the Pakistan team, prompting the BCCI to say the tour “is on” at the end of the year. The clearance was given at a meeting in New Delhi on Tuesday between ministry officials and senior representatives of the BCCI – including its chief administrative officer Ratnakar Shetty, IPL chairman Rajiv Shukla and chief executive Sundar Raman.”We have discussed all security aspects (and) the tour is on,” Shukla told reporters after the meeting.The tour – which now needs only a formal announcement by the two boards to be official – will comprise three ODIs and two Twenty20s at Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata, Ahmedabad and Bangalore. Pakistan are due to arrive on December 22 and Shukla said the tour would continue till January 7 but the detailed schedule is yet to be announced. However, there is little room for flexibility because the series is sandwiched between two legs of England’s tour of India.It will be the first bilateral series between the two sides since Pakistan toured India in end-2007, though they have met in multinational tournaments. Cricket ties between the two countries were snapped following the 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai by militants from Pakistan.The decision to play the series came after prolonged consultations between officials of the two boards – BCCI president N Srinivasan and PCB chief Zaka Ashraf had held several discussions this year regarding resumption of ties – and, latterly, of the two governments.It is Pakistan’s turn to host a bilateral series between the two. But there has been no international cricket in the country between Full Members since the March 2009 attack on the Sri Lanka team bus and it is understood that India were not keen to play at a neutral venue, as has been the case with all Pakistan’s ‘home’ series since the attack. Subsequently, Ashraf said India had the prerogative to decide on the dates and host the series, but the PCB would want the BCCI to share revenue as they were apparently yet to recover from the financial loss suffered when India pulled out of their planned tour in 2009.

Ahmedabad Twenty20 postponed by a day

The second Twenty20 international between India and Pakistan, originally scheduled for December 27 this year in Ahmedabad, has been postponed by a day, the BCCI has confirmed. The game will be played on Friday, December 28, at the Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium.According to reports, the PCB requested the BCCI to reschedule the game, as December 27 is the death anniversary of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007.The rest of the itinerary remains unchanged. India and Pakistan play two Twenty20s and three ODIs between December 25 and January 6.

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