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Tuesday April 16, 2024

PSL draft held in Dubai, final to be played in Lahore

By Web Desk
October 19, 2016

DUBAI: The Pakistan Super League (PSL) 2017 Draft was held at the Dome in Dubai Sporty City in a colourful ceremony with five franchises bagging the best players for the event, to be held in February-March in UAE next year.

Pakistan will stage the 2017 final of their Twenty20 franchise league in Lahore but teams will fly in and fly out for the showpiece event in a sobering nod to the delicate security situation in the country.

Some 414 players were placed in the draft for the Pakistan Super League (PSL) on Wednesday, a list which included former New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum, West Indian stars Chris Gayle and Dwayne Bravo, Australia´s Shane Watson, Bangladesh´s Shakib Al Hasan and England´s Twenty20 captain Eoin Morgan.

Former England batsman Kevin Pietersen will also take part, while the inclusion of Morgan is particularly noteworthy after he withdrew from England´s ongoing tour of Bangladesh over security concerns.

Five teams took part in the inaugural edition of the PSL which was held entirely in Dubai and Sharjah in February this year.

PSL chairman Najam Sethi announced Wednesday that the 2017 final will be held in Lahore, the bustling city where the Sri Lankan team bus was attacked by militants in 2009.

That outrage forced Pakistan to play their "home" matches at the neutral venues of the United Arab Emirates with only a brief visit by Zimbabwe in 2015 snapping the isolation.

"The second edition of the PSL, again with five teams in competition, will be more successful and the final will be held in Lahore," Sethi announced at the draft ceremony.

"International players know what we can do; most of them are ready to come to Pakistan and play."

Sethi said top-level security will be put in place for the players.

"It will be a fly-in, fly out plan and the government has promised to give full security to the players. We are convinced that the final will happen in Lahore," he said.

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) announced a profit of $2.6 million (260 million rupees) from the first edition.