HomeSportsCricketNajam Sethi on Pakistan Asia Cup boycott meeting: 'Wasn’t planning to help Mohsin Naqvi, went to help PCB'

Najam Sethi on Pakistan Asia Cup boycott meeting: 'Wasn’t planning to help Mohsin Naqvi, went to help PCB'

Over the last few days, the Asia Cup has witnessed a lot of off-the-field drama, with Pakistan taking centrestage.

September 20, 2025 / 13:01 IST
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Chairman of Pakistan Cricket Board, Mohsin Naqvi, center, speaks as former cricket board heads Najam Sethi, left, and Ramiz Raja watch during a press conference regarding the Asia Cup tournament, in Lahore, Pakistan. (AP Photo)
Chairman of Pakistan Cricket Board, Mohsin Naqvi, center, speaks as former cricket board heads Najam Sethi, left, and Ramiz Raja watch during a press conference regarding the Asia Cup tournament, in Lahore, Pakistan. (AP Photo)

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) would have lost $15 million if they pulled out of the ongoing Asian Cup. And going beyond just the hard numbers, they could have suffered “irreparable damage”. The fear factor eventually forced PCB chair Mohsin Naqvi to retract his decision and fall in line.

Two former PCB chiefs, Najam Sethi and Ramiz Raja, played their part to ensure better sense eventually prevailed. Naqvi, who is also the ACC president, was sort of hell-bent on boycotting the Asia Cup following the controversial handshake incident in the India-Pakistan group league fixture. The Pakistan players and support staff were even ordered to deboard the team bus before their final group league game against UAE. Naqvi changed his decision following an emergency meeting with Sethi and Raja, and the match eventually got underway an hour late.

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“If what he (Naqvi) was attempting had succeeded, Pakistan would have suffered irreparable damage. We could have been sanctioned by the Asian Cricket Council, penalised by the International Cricket Council (ICC), foreign players might have refused to play in the PSL, and we stood to lose $15 million in ACC broadcasting rights,” Sethi disclosed on Samaa TV.