PCB rejects Khalid Latif's plea against suspension
Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) adjudicator has on Wednesday rejected Khalid Latif's request that the cricketer had documented against his suspension, yet diminished him of Rs one million fine.
The hearing was directed at the National Cricket Academy.
PCB had prohibited right-hand opening batsman Khalid Latif for a long time, and fined one million rupees in the spot-settling outrage that damaged amid the second version of Pakistan Super League (PSL).
Latif played for Islamabad United in the super alliance, and every one of the six claims that were leveled against him under PCB's hostile to debasement code had been demonstrated.
Latif, 32, was accused of organizing an arrangement with a bookie that would see his kindred opener Sharjeel Khan intentionally playing two speck balls -
conveyances off which no run is scored - in the opening match against Peshawar Zalmi in Dubai.
Spot-settling includes deciding the result of a particular piece of a match as opposed to the general outcome, and is along these lines harder to recognize than coordinate settling.
Sharjeel was additionally restricted for a long time - more than two years suspended - and his allure was dismissed last November.
Paceman Mohammad Irfan and spinner Mohammad Nawaz were prohibited for one year and two months individually for not revealing settling offers.
Another previous opener Nasir Jamshed - claimed to have assumed a part as organizer in the PSL settling bargain - was prohibited for one year for not collaborating with the request.
The ruling against another global player, Shahzaib Hasan, was held and will be declared on Saturday.
Pakistani cricket has for some time been polluted by assertions of spot-settling.
The most scandalous episode went ahead the 2010 voyage through England, when then-skipper Salman Butt and bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif were altogether given jail sentences for consiring to bowl think no-balls in the fourth Test at Lord s.
No comments