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Asia Cup 2025

PCB claims Pycroft apologised for prohibiting handshake with India

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The Pakistan Cricket Board on Wednesday claimed that match referee Andy Pycroft apologised to its national team for prohibiting the handshake between Indian and Pakistani players during their Asia Cup match in Dubai.

Pakistan, who delayed their departure for the game against the UAE here on Wednesday to protest the ICC’s refusal to remove Pycroft, claimed that the Zimbabwean had apologised for his actions.

“ICC’s controversial match referee Andy Pycroft has apologized to the manager and captain of the Pakistani cricket team. Andy Pycroft had prohibited the captains of both teams from shaking hands during the India-Pakistan match,” the PCB said in a statement on ‘X’.

“The Pakistan Cricket Board had strongly reacted to Andy Pycroft’s action. Andy Pycroft termed the incident on September 14 as a result of miscommunication and apologized,” it added.

The Pakistan Board also claimed that the ICC would be investigating its complaint against Pycroft.

“The ICC has expressed its readiness to investigate the violation of the Code of Conduct during the match on September 14,” it stated.

Earlier, Pakistan showed up for the crucial Asia Cup game against the UAE but not before causing a dramatic delay after the ICC’s persistent rejection of its demand to remove match referee Andy Pycroft.

The team had earlier refused to leave its hotel for the must-win group match as Pycroft will officiate the game that will now start at 9pm IST instead of the original 8pm start.

Teams are required to report at the stadium two hours before the start of the game which Pakistan failed to do in protest.

That Pycroft would remain match referee was communicated to PCB chairman and Asian Cricket Council head Mohsin Naqvi by ICC CEO Sanjog Gupta in a conference call.

The ICC maintained that the Zimbabwean will remain in charge as he has followed the rules and regulations to the ‘T’.

Pakistan had held Pycroft responsible for the embarrassment it faced after its captain Salman Ali Agha and India skipper Suryakumar did not exchange a handshake and their team sheets during the toss on Sunday.

The PCB said that Pycroft had told Salman to avoid a handshake with Suryakumar and told the two captains to not exchange team sheets.

The Indian players did not shake hands with the rivals even after the match as a mark of solidarity with the victims of the Pahalgam terror attack.

On Wednesday, once the Pakistan team didn’t leave from the Grosvenor Hotel in Dubai, it was evident that the deadlock continued after the rejection of a second PCB complaint by the ICC..

Pycroft himself was present at the Dubai International Stadium and left the venue surrounded by bodyguards after he was called to the ICC Headquarters just a kilometer away from the ground.

The ICC gave a six-point rebuttal in which maintained that the PCB’s complaints were baseless.

The ICC in its written communication stated: “The ICC’s investigation was conducted on the basis of the information provided in the report lodged by the PCB. We took the report at Face value and note that no supporting documentation or evidence was provided with it.

“The PCB had every opportunity to submit statement from its team members alongside the initial report but chose not to do so.” The second point stated that there was “no case to answer” on the part of match referee.

“The actions that match referee took was, following clear directions to him from ACC (Asian Cricket Council) Venue Manager, were consistent with how a match referee will deal with such an issue, communicated as it was with no time for him to do anything else (minutes before the toss).”

The ICC in its third pointer was clear that Pycroft was committed to “preserving the sanctity of the toss and avoiding any potential embarrassment that might have arisen.

“The Match Referee was not at fault in any of this.”

“It is not the role of the Match Referee to regulate ay team or tournament specific protocols which have been agreed outside of the area of play, that is a matter for the tournament organizers and relevant team managers,” the ICC added.

The conclusion was a terse one where the ICC brass wondered if “…the PCB’s real concern or complain relates to the actual decision that handshakes didn’t take place.”

“The PCB should therefore direct those complaint to the tournament organiser and those who took the actual decision (which was not the Match Referee). The ICC doesn’t have a role in that.”

In a nutshell, ICC actually put the ball back in “ACC chairman” Mohsin Naqvi and Tournament Director Andy Russell’s court.

The PCB can lose up to $16 million if they don’t play the tournament. Naqvi took advice from two former PCB chairmen — Ramiz Raja and Najam Sethi — before deciding that the team would continue.

It is not known what transpired in that meeting but soon after Naqvi took to ‘X’ and announced.

“We have asked the Pakistan team to depart for the Dubai Cricket Stadium. Further details to follow.” The team left the venue soon after that.

Meanwhile, UAE captain Muhammad Waseem won the toss and opted to bowl first.

Asia Cup 2025

BCCI gets SL, Afghan support on Asia Cup trophy fiasco but Naqvi refuses to budge

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The deadlock over the Asia Cup trophy, which is yet to reach champions India, continues to be unresolved as the Asian Cricket Council’s Pakistani head Mohsin Naqvi has refused to part with it despite a fresh missive from the BCCI, backed by boards of Afghanistan and Sri Lanka.

A top ACC source told PTI that Naqvi has insisted that a BCCI representative collect the trophy from him at the body’s headquarters in Dubai but the Indian board has rejected that stance. The BCCI has reiterated that it will raise this matter in an ICC meeting next month.

“The BCCI secretary (Devajit Saikia), BCCI’s ACC representative Rajeev Shukla and representatives of other member boards including Sri Lanka Cricket and Afghanistan had written to the ACC president last week over handing the trophy to India,” the ACC source said.

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Asia Cup 2025

Atherton demands end to “neatly arranged” Indo-Pak clashes in ICC events after Asia Cup controversies

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Alleging that draws have been “neatly arranged” to ensure India-Pakistan clashes in ICC tournaments for “economic needs”, former England captain Michael Atherton has called for a complete halt to cricket between the two bitter rivals as sport has become a “proxy for broader tensions and propaganda”.

In a scathing column for  The Times, Atherton cited the recent “antics” at the Asia Cup where the Indian team refused to shake hands with Pakistani players and the Asian Cricket Council’s Pakistani head Mohsin Naqvi walked away with the winner’s trophy after the Indians refused to accept it from him.

“India and Pakistan have played each other in the group stage of every ICC event since 2013, which includes three 50-over World Cups, five T20 World Cups and three Champions Trophy,” Atherton said.

“That is regardless of whether the initial stage has been a single round robin – part of the motivation for which is the inevitability of an India versus Pakistan fixture – or multi-group, when the draws have been neatly arranged to ensure the fixture goes ahead,” he added.

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Asia Cup 2025

Kuldeep says bowling in Duleep Trophy helped him find his rhythm back

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India veteran spinner Kuldeep Yadav revealed that bowling in the Duleep Trophy before the Asia Cup 2025 helped him to get his rhythm back in the mega event. Kuldeep Yadav was the pick of the bowlers against Pakistan in the Asia Cup 2025 summit clash at Dubai International Stadium in Dubai. 

Notably, the 30-year-old veteran spinner was part of India’s squad for the five-Test match series of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy 2025, but he was unable to feature in the playing XI as the management decided to feature with more batting options. 

Kuldeep ended his Asia Cup 2025 campaign as the highest wicket-taker with 17 scalps in nine outings of the tournament. His best figures of the tournament were 4/7 against the UAE in Dubai. After India’s five-wicket win against Pakistan in the title decider, the Uttar Pradesh-born spinner told Rinku Singh in a candid chat that skipper Suryakumar Yadav backed him a lot. 

“I don’t have fixed goals and I have only one motivation to perform well for the team whenever I get a chance. When you are out of cricketing action, you need rhythm. That was important to me, and I played the Duleep Trophy where I bowled a lot, so when I came in Dubai for the Asia Cup, I got my rhythm. My role was to bowl in the middle over and control the run flow. The captain backed me a lot in this, thanks to the captain” Kuldeep Yadav told Rinku Singh on a video shared by BCCI. 

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