Ending days of speculation, President Asif Ali Zardari on Tuesday appointed noted banker Zaka Ashraf as chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board in place of Ijaz Butt.
In a notification issued late in the evening, Ashraf was named new chairman of the Board.
Butt, who completed his three-year tenure on October 8, had returned from Dubai on Monday after attending the executive board meeting of the International Cricket Council.
Ashraf is known as an ardent cricket follower who, as president of the Zarai Taraqyati Bank (ZTBL), regularised jobs of cricketers in his organisation.
A senior Board official confirmed that the government had issued a notification with regard to the appointment of the new PCB chairman.
"Under the constitution any one appointed as chairman automatically has a three-year term," chief operating officer Subhan Ahmad said.
Ashraf is said to be a close friend of President Zardari as both studied together at Petaro College and stayed in the hostel.
Ahmad said Butt attended office on Tuesday but left soon.
"He was pre-occupied and left early. Indications were that he had been informed about the change by the Presidency," Ahmad said.
Butt's three-year tenure has been dodged by controversies and scandals and will be remembered for the infamous attack by militants on the Sri Lankan team in March 2009 which led to foreign teams boycotting playing in Pakistan.
His tenure was also hit by the spot-fixing scandal last year in England when three Pakistani players -- Salman Butt, Muhammad Asif and Muhammad Aamir -- were caught for allegedly bowling no-balls for money.
The ICC later banned the trio for their involvement in spot-fixing and they are now also facing criminal charges in a court in London.
Butt also became notorious for his treatment of senior players, which he claimed he was doing to root out groupism in the team.
His differences with former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi have been well documented and it is said that the latter announced his retirement from international cricket because of the tussle with the Butt.
Five candidates were said to be considered for the post of PCB chairman. Among them were former Test captains Majid Khan and Zaheer Abbas.
"Obviously when a new chairman takes over there will be changes in the Board but it remains to be seen whether these changes are cosmetic or on merit," former chief executive of the Board Arif Abbasi said.
He said there was a dire need for more authority to be given to the governing board of members and a more democratic system of governance in Pakistan cricket.
Former Pakistan captain Moin Khan felt that with a new Chairman coming in, Afridi and other senior players like Muhammad Yousuf, Abdul Razzaq, Kamran Akmal and Danish Kaneria might get new lifelines in their international career.