Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch

About time too and I hope they don’t give into ECB now.

**Pakistan ‘reject’ Multan switch **](BBC SPORT | Cricket | Ashes 2005 | Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch)

The Pakistan Cricket Board has rejected a request from its English counterpart to move the first winter Test from Multan to Rawalpindi, say reports.

Saleem Altaf, the PCB’s operations director, claimed the ECB had objected on security and accommodation grounds.

“We have rejected this proposition since Multan has a beautiful Test stadium and is one of our best venues,” Altaf told Pakistan paper The News.

An ECB spokesman refused to confirm whether Multan had been discussed.

The England and Wales Cricket Board tabled a number of proposals regarding venues in a meeting in Lahore earlier this month.

The ECB has already refused to play a Test in Karachi and said England will only play one limited overs international in the city. According to The News, the ECB objected to the distance between the hotel and the stadium in Multan, the security risks associated with a long daily journey and the limited number of quality hotels in the city. An ECB spokesman told BBC Sport: “We had discussions with them about many issues. Karachi was the most contentious but the rest are private. We still haven’t received the final proposed schedule.”

Re: Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch

Finally a good move by the PCB. Its about time they took a firm stance on an issue.

Re: Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch

yes ehsan bhai u r right...its abt time they stood up

Re: Pakistan ‘reject’ Multan switch

England confirm Pakistan dates
Cricinfo staff
July 28, 2005

England will play three Tests and five one-day internationals on their tour of Pakistan this winter, having finally agreed their itinerary after lengthy negotiations with the Pakistan Cricket Board.

The tour, which gets underway on October 26, includes a solitary one-day game at the disputed venue of Karachi, while the first Test will take place at the PCB’s favoured location of Multan, and not Rawalpindi, the alternative suggested by the England & Wales Cricket Board.

In a change from the format on the last England tour to Pakistan in 2000-01, the Tests will take place first, with the Multan match launching the series on November 12. The second Test at Faisalabad begins on November 20, and the third, at the Gadaffi Stadium in Lahore, on November 29.

England have one non-first-class warm-up match to prepare for the Tests, starting on October 31 in Rawalpindi, although if the Muslim festival of Eid falls on the third and final day of the fixture, then there will be no play on that day. They then switch formats, with five one-day internationals in 11 days - two in Lahore, one in Karachi, and two in Rawalpindi - before the team flies home for Christmas on Dec 21.

Though the schedule has been agreed in principle, the ECB stressed that the tour would only go ahead subject to on-going advice from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) and their own security advisers. “The safety and security of the tour party, travelling media and supporters is a top priority on any England tour,” said John Carr, the ECB’s director of cricket operations. “The tour to Pakistan is no exception.”

The ECB also added that they believed Multan to be “an outstanding cricketing facility”. The prime reason for suggesting Rawalpindi as an alternative Test venue was because of the greater number of international-class hotels in that area, to accommodate the team, media and travelling spectators.

Tour dates

Oct 26 Arrive in Pakistan
Oct 31- Nov 2 Tour match (Rawalpindi)
**Nov 6-8 **Tour match (Bagh-e-Jinnah, Lahore)
Nov 12-16 First Test (Multan)
Nov 20-24 Second Test (Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad)
Nov 29-Dec 3 Third Test (Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore)
Dec 7 One-day warm-up (Bagh-e-Jinnah, Lahore)
Dec 10 First ODI (Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore)
Dec 12 Second ODI (Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore)
Dec 15 Third ODI (National Stadium, Karachi)
Dec 19 Fourth ODI (Rawalpindi)
Dec 21 Fifth ODI (Rawalpindi)
Dec 22 England team fly home.

Re: Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch

dair ayed, durast ayed

PCB should take same stand for Karachi too.

Media reports suggest that main reason of England's security team to give negative report about Karachi was the heavy presence of Law enforcement agencies. There logic was "if Karachi is safe then why we have so many law enforcing personals guarding us". If the report is right tu sar peetney ko dil kerta hai coz if we go by same logic then UK is the most unsafe place to go from ages becasue of CCTV cameras and now by all heavy police presence!

Re: Pakistan ‘reject’ Multan switch

^ :k: well said…but in regards to Karachi I think damage is done. Let’s hope next time things will change.

Re: Pakistan ‘reject’ Multan switch

Why England must conquer the fear of the unknown

Andrew Miller

As football seeps back into the national consciousness, so the ECB’s own winter sport is returning on the agenda. Yes, the weather has turned autumnal and the Aussies are on top once again, so it’s time to shift the focus on to England’s latest unpalatable destination for an overseas tour. For once, Zimbabwe isn’t the issue, although in the circumstances the ECB might prefer a winter spent in the immoral arms of Uncle Bob. Because this time round they’ve landed the hottest ticket in town - Pakistan.

It hasn’t yet turned it into a full-blown crisis, but that is because things are still at the germination stage. You watch, all the usual signs are gathering into place. The security delegation has been dispatched, the players’ growing unease has been noted, and the ECB’s fear of a tit-for-tat reprisal (ie, the cancellation of Pakistan’s visit to England next summer) has been spotted. The long-awaited itinerary is expected to be finalised this week, but that could merely prove to be a basis for negotiation.

Karachi had always been the central issue of this trip. A hot, unlovely city on the Arabian Sea, and the scene, in May 2002, of the fatal explosion outside the New Zealand team hotel that killed 14 people. England, understandably enough, were reluctant to play a Test there, and the Pakistan Cricket Board were willing to accede to that request. Now, however, England are raising doubts about the suitability of the stand-in venue, Multan, and the PCB, quite reasonably, is refusing to budge.

Given the recent spate of bomb attacks in London, and the subsequent relevations that a number of the culprits may have attended training camps in Pakistan, nobody can blame the ECB for being jittery at this particular time. But if there is one lesson to be learnt from the past month’s events, it is that there is no accounting for extremism. It exists outside boundaries and when atrocities occur, the only thing you can do is make like London, and get on with life regardless.

Flip the issue on its head, and England’s anxieties begin to take on a sheen of paranoia. Next summer, Pakistan themselves have been scheduled to play two Tests in London, including one at The Oval, less than 200 yards from where a suspect package failed to detonate on July 21, and one in Leeds, that recently confirmed hotbed of extremism. When Inter Milan cancelled their pre-season trip to London in the wake of the atrocities, they were forced to reconsider after an indignant howl of protest. To cancel is to give in to the terrorists, so the reasoning went. Why should it be any different for England’s cricketers?

In the aftermath of the first wave of attacks, the police released one nugget of information that stuck in the mind. Shehzad Tanweer, the Aldgate bomber, had been a keen cricket player. This could be interpreted in one of two ways - either all cricketers have extremist tendencies (difficult to deny on occasions, admittedly, but ludicrous all the same), or rather, the sheer overwhelming normality of this man’s life was a warning to those inclined to make sweeping judgments.

I travelled to Pakistan during England’s last tour of the country in the winter of 2000-01. In those pre-September 11 days, the fears were dampened but the suspicions remained nonetheless, for Pakistan was a misunderstood land, forever at loggerheads with its trendier neighbour, India. What is more, the country had remained off-limits for England teams since Mike Gatting’s fractious trip in 1987-88.

The country I found was nothing like the country I had expected. Warm, welcoming and unfailingly polite, the society was underpinned by a gentle Islamic culture that was less jihad, more que sera sera. “Inshallah”, that ubiquitous Islamic greeting (literally - “whatever God wills”) was the standard answer to all problems, inevitably delivered with a shrug of the shoulders that was the very antithesis of fanaticism.

My experiences were not dissimilar to those of my colleague, Rahul Bhattacharya, who recorded India’s epic bridge-building series in his remarkable debut book, Pundits from Pakistan. He found two nations willing to immerse their differences - and rediscover their similarities - in a common love of cricket, and that challenge, should they be willing to accept it, is the one that awaits England this winter.

My suspicion is that England’s concerns are not so much a question of security, but a question of convenience. Multan, like the unloved Faisalabad, is a provincial town in Pakistan’s cotton belt that offers just one five-star hotel and not a lot in the way of golf courses. Boredom, not bomb threats, is the primary concern.

That’s fair enough, because England’s cricketers did not sign up to be peace envoys, but in strange times, strange solutions present themselves. The team and their advisors have cried wolf about security issues in the past, most embarrassingly in Zimbabwe during the World Cup, when their desperation to escape an awkward commitment caused them to desert the moral high ground, the only issue on which they had a leg to stand on.

This time the situation is reversed. The threat is very real, but then, that is equally the case if the players take the Tube between matches. Now, however, it is morality - the advancement of human relations between two cultures at loggerheads - that forms the primary reason for them to go.

SOURCE: http://content.cricinfo.com/england/content/story/214512.html

Re: Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch

Is it a coincidence that our PCB stood up against ECB after Mushy stood up against allegations of Pakistani's (or descent of) involvement in recent bombings by Englistan and Egyptville?

Re: Pakistan ‘reject’ Multan switch

Andrew Miller :clap:

Re: Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch

Pakistan has only 5 or 6 international grounds. If England won't play in Karachi and won't play in Peshawar and Multan, then where the hell would they play?

Re: Pakistan 'reject' Multan switch

Heard on GEO that in 2006 when Pakistan will tour England PCB will send a security expert to London and other parts to make sure Pakistani team gets propper security protection to avoid any security risks. PCB states no place in the world can be labeled as safe now adays its not just Pakistan.