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Pakistan hope to face Australia within a year
Staff Report
ISLAMABAD—The Pakistan Cricket Board will look to reschedule Australia’s
Test tour in November or next March after the original trip was
postponed on Tuesday.
Australia’s players are relieved the decision was made to cancel the
visit over security and saftey concerns, but they are still due in the
country for the Champions Trophy tournament in October, an event David
Morgan, the ICC president-elect, wants to go ahead as planned.
Shafqat Naghmi, the PCB’s chief operating officer, told the Sydney
Morning Herald Cricket Australia had asked the hosts to propose a new
date. “We have looked at the international schedule and all of the other
factors, and we think either November this year or March next year would
be a good time for the tour to go ahead,” Naghmi said. “If it was to
proceed in November, it would most likely be a split tour, with the
Australians then coming back in March.
“But if it were to take place in March, it would be a full tour. From
reading James Sutherland’s statements, I think he favours March.”
Australia are also due in India in October and will host a Test series
against New Zealand and start a contest with South Africa before the end
of 2008.
Both the PCB and the Australian government do not believe the Indian
Premier League (IPL), which is due to start on April 18, had any
influence on the team staying home. “There have been suggestions that
somehow the decision by Cricket Australia and the Pakistan Cricket Board
is related to proposed Twenty20 games in India,” Stephen Smith,
Australia’s foreign minister, said in the Australian.
“I absolutely reject that suggestion. From the first time I had a
conversation with Cricket Australia about this matter, I was absolutely
convinced that CA had the security, safety and welfare of their players
and any members of a touring party uppermost in their minds.”
The window in the calendar theoretically frees Australia’s players to
take part in the lucrative IPL, but there have been suggestions Cricket
Australia will stage a short limited-overs series before leaving for the
West Indies on May 10. However, Tim Nielsen, the national coach, has not
finalised Australia’s schedule and believes Twenty20 games would be good
preparation.
“As long as it fits in and Cricket Australia is comfortable with it, I
don’t have any problem,” Nielsen told the Age. “It is nice that they can
play some competitive cricket. I always encourage guys to be playing
county cricket when it fits in because it is nice to be playing
competitive, organised cricket. It is probably the best preparation they
can get to put their bodies through those sorts of workloads.”
Michael Clarke and Stuart Clark joined Matthew Hayden and Brett Lee in
welcoming the decision to pull out of the tour.
“I don’t think ‘disappointed’ is the right word - I’m rapt Cricket
Australia and the Australian Cricketers’ Association made the decision
and it didn’t have to come down to individual players,” Clarke told AAP.
“I’m very relieved and happy they’ve done that for the playing group.”
Clark said the squad was worried about the situation in Pakistan. “I
don’t think anyone likes it when a cricket tour gets called off because
that’s our job, but there were obviously concerns from everyone
involved,” he said. “We were getting third-hand information, reading the
papers and listening to the news on the TV and we were obviously getting
the sensational news about bombings and stuff like that.”
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