|
PCB hopes to
change Champions Trophy dates
LAHORE—Pakistan board officials have been trying to move next year’s
Champions Trophy from September to October to avoid hosting the
tournament during Ramadan, but a packed international calendar is not
allowing any change of dates.
“As things stand, the Champions Trophy will be played in September next
year at a time when we will be observing the holy month of Ramadan,”
Shafqat Naghmi, the PCB’s chief operating officer, said. “We do not
believe it would be an appropriate time to hold such a mega event and
have informed the ICC about it.” Naghmi raised this issue at an ICC
chief executives’ meeting in South Africa last month but the suggestion
to move the tournament to October was shot down because of a packed
international schedule. Representatives of England, India, West Indies
and New Zealand made it clear at the meeting that their teams could not
play the tournament if the dates were changed since they have other
international assignments in October as per ICC’s Future Tours Programme.
“September doesn’t suit us because it would be difficult to guarantee
attendance for matches during Ramadan,” said Naghmi. It will be
Pakistan’s first time hosting the Champions Trophy and the first major
tournament in the country since the World Cup in 1996.
But guaranteeing full stadiums is not the only concern for the PCB
officials who are also worried about the timing of the matches. “We
don’t want to have action on the ground at a time when spectators and
the people watching the matches on television are busy breaking their
fast [Iftar]. I don’t think it would be appropriate,” Naghmi said.
The bad news for the PCB is that it will be fasting season during almost
the whole of next September which means that all the matches of the
Champions Trophy will have to be played during Ramadan. However, Naghmi
said that PCB is still hoping that with mutual consent, Pakistan and the
ICC will work out the schedule.
“For the Champions Trophy to be really successful, it is important that
we find best possible dates for the event and we are trying our best to
do it,” he said.—Agencies
Naghmi is aware that the FTP’s schedule might not allow any change of
dates and the PCB is already working on plans to have a successful event
even during Ramadan.
“We might work out match timings with the innings break coming at Iftar
time,” he said adding that several proposals were under consideration in
a bid to successfully host the Champions Trophy.
ICC officials will arrive in Pakistan on November 2 to review the three
venues for the event - Lahore, Karachi and Rawalpindi. |