Days after being named Pakistan selector, Kamran Akmal announces retirement from all forms of cricket
Pakistan wicketkeeper-batter Kamran Akmal on Tuesday announced his retirement from all forms of cricket after being named on the national selection committee.
Kamran told the media on Tuesday that he had taken retirement with immediate since he had also taken up coaching as a profession.
“I don't think after you come into coaching or become a national selector you can focus on playing,” he said.
Kamran, who appeared in 268 international matches for Pakistan until 2017m was also dropped by Pakistan Super League franchise Peshawar Zalmi for the 8th season and instead signed the wicketkeeper to be on its coaching staff.
Kamran, who is the first cousin of Pakistan captain Babar Azam, made it clear he had a lot of respect for the latter's cricketing prowess.
“He is one our great batters and my job as selector and as coach in Zalmi is to help him fine tune himself as a captain and as a batsman. But he has no flaws in his batting this we have seen over the years.”
Kamran said that his younger brother Umar Akmal would have to perform consistently and also prove his fitness to be considered for national selection again.
Pakistan first class cricketer Asif Afridi banned for two years
Left-arm spinner Asif Afridi, who was once selected in the Pakistan squad but did not get a game, was on Tuesday banned for two years after he pleaded guilty to an anti-corruption code violation.
The 36-year-old's ban commenced from September 22, 2022 when he was provisionally suspended by the Pakistan Cricket Board.
He was picked for Pakistan's white ball squad for the home T20 series against Australia but never played for the national side. Asif has 118 wickets from 36 first-class matches.
The PCB found him guilty of two breaches of the anti-corruption code for which he got a two year ban and a six month ban and both the periods of ineligibility will run concurrently.
“The PCB while handing the ban took into consideration the admission of guilt, expression of remorse, past track record and Asif Afridi's request that the PCB considers his case compassionately, claiming he had unintentionally breached the Code,” the PCB said in a statement.
“It gives the PCB no joy to suspend an international cricketer for two years, but we have a zero-tolerance approach towards such offences,” PCB chairman Najam Sethi said.
"As the game's governing body, we need to make examples, handle such matters robustly and send out strong messages to all cricketers."
“It is a bitter fact that corruption poses a threat to our sport as selfish corrupters lure cricketers in different ways and methods.
"That's precisely why the PCB has been investing heavily on player education so that they remain vigilant and can help the PCB eradicate this menace by reporting approaches and if, despite all our best efforts to create awareness, a player falls victim to his greed, then the PCB has no sympathy.”