ICC gives flat wicket in Rawalpindi another demerit point

In the picture taken on March 7, 2022, Pakistan's captain Babar Azam (top C) inspects the pitch along with Australia's players at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium in Rawalpindi. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 13 December 2022
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ICC gives flat wicket in Rawalpindi another demerit point

  • The ICC on Tuesday said match referee Andy Pycroft rated the pitch ‘below average’
  • England plundered a record 506-4 on Day 1 with four of its batters scoring centuries

ISLAMABAD: The flat wicket at Pindi Cricket Stadium has received another demerit point within nine months from the International Cricket Council after England recorded a historic 74-run victory over Pakistan in the first test at Rawalpindi last week.

The ICC on Tuesday said match referee Andy Pycroft rated the pitch “below average” as England plundered a world-record 506-4 on Day 1 with four of its batters scoring centuries.

England went on to score 657 in 101 overs before Pakistan also replied with 579, with three batters from the home team scoring hundreds.

“It was a very flat pitch which gave almost no assistance to any type of bowler,” Pycroft said in an ICC statement. “That was the main reason why batters scored very fast and both sides posted huge totals. The pitch hardly deteriorated during the course of the match.”

England went on to win its first test in Pakistan in 17 years after Pakistan lost its last five wickets for nine runs and got bowled out for 268 in dimming light on the last day. England has since clinched the series with a narrow win in the second cricket test at Multan.

In March, a similar type of wicket at the same venue received a demerit point from the ICC when only 14 wickets fell over five days in a test match between Pakistan and Australia.

A venue can be suspended from hosting international cricket if it accumulates five demerit points within five years.


Pakistan minister in Saudi Arabia to attend World Defense Show exhibition 

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Pakistan minister in Saudi Arabia to attend World Defense Show exhibition 

  • Defense Minister Khawaja Asif to attend five-day event featuring global companies specializing in defense, security sectors
  • Pakistan, Saudi Arabia signed a strategic defense pact last year formalizing decades of decades of military cooperation 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif arrived in Riyadh this week to attend the five-day Saudi Defense Show exhibition, state media reported, where more than 700 exhibitors are expected to showcase their products. 

Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Military Industries (GAMI) is organizing the event from Feb. 8-12 in Riyadh, according to the Saudi Press Agency. The event brings together official delegations, government entities and leading international companies specializing in the defense and security sectors. 

GAMI Governor Ahmad Al-Ohali has said the event will feature a comprehensive program, including live air and land demonstrations, static displays and newly developed zones, enhancing opportunities for partnership and integration between Saudi government entities and major national and global defense companies. 

“Defense Minister of Pakistan, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, has arrived in Riyadh on the official invitation of the Government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to attend the World Defense Show,” the state-run Pakistan Television News (PTV) said on Saturday. 

It said Asif was received by senior Saudi officials and Pakistan’s Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Ahmed Farooq, after arriving in Riyadh. 

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have strengthened their economic and defense ties in recent years as regional tensions and militant violence escalate. 

The two nations signed a Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement on Sept. 17, 2025, pledging that aggression against one country would be treated as an attack on both, enhancing joint deterrence and formalizing decades of military and security cooperation.

The pact was signed during Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s state visit to Riyadh, where he met Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. 

A month later, the two countries complemented their defense pact with an economic cooperation framework to boost trade and investment ties. 

Pakistan regards Saudi Arabia as a critical ally, with the Kingdom hosting over 2.5 million Pakistani expatriates. This makes Saudi Arabia the largest source of remittances for cash-strapped Pakistan worldwide.