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Pakistan plan Colombo departure, effectively rule out T20 World Cup or India match boycott

Pakistan squad leaves on February 2, with all matches scheduled in Sri Lanka under ICC’s neutral venue agreement

In this Friday, Oct. 6, 2023, file photo, Pakistan's players celebrate the wicket of Netherlands' batter Vikram Singh during the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup match between Pakistan and Netherlands, at Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium, in Hyderabad. The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) will take a final call on participating in the men's T20 World Cup either on Friday or next Monday, chairman Mohsin Naqvi said after meeting Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif PTI

PTI
Published 29.01.26, 03:56 PM

The Pakistan Cricket Board has already scheduled its T20 World Cup squad to depart for Colombo early on February 2, virtually ruling out any possibility of boycotting either the tournament or the marquee clash against India on February 15, sources close to the board said on Thursday.

"The PCB has already made travel arrangements for the World Cup squad to leave early morning on February 2 for Colombo," he said.

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The source added that PCB had shown its full support to Bangladesh Cricket Board over their "security concerns" in playing in India and could not do anything further without damaging its own position within the ICC.

The BCCI, PCB and ICC had also entered into a tripartite agreement under which all India-Pakistan matches in ICC events until 2027 will be played at neutral venues.

"Keep in mind Pakistan’s entire World Cup schedule is in Sri Lanka, including the final if they qualify. So on what grounds can they boycott the tournament or the match against India?" he asked.

It is expected that the PCB would confirm their participation on Friday.

There has been speculation in sections of the media that Pakistan could pull out of the tournament or refuse to play India.

But an insider dismissed such reports as rumours.

"When the PCB Chairman, Mohsin Naqvi, met with Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, he made it clear that all options under consideration should ensure a stable and prosperous future for Pakistan cricket and maintain good relations with the ICC and member boards," the insider said.

He added that the speculation lacked logic and failed to explain on what grounds the PCB could skip the World Cup or boycott the India match.

"The Indian government has said no to its team playing in Pakistan, but there is no bar on India playing Pakistan in Asia Cup-level events or in ICC events at neutral venues," he said.

"So how will Pakistan justify boycotting the match against India when its government has always claimed politics should not be mixed with sports?" he asked.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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