Pakistan names Shahid Afridi as new interim chief selector of cricket team

Pakistan's cricket team captain Shahid Afridi during a training session at Punjab Cricket Association Cricket Stadium in Mohali, Punjab-India on March 21, 2016. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 24 December 2022
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Pakistan names Shahid Afridi as new interim chief selector of cricket team

  • The interim PCB chairman, Najam Sethi, hopes Afridi will take bold decisions, produce a more competitive squad
  • Pakistan suffered a 3-0 clean sweep against England, its first whitewash at home in a series of three test matches

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Cricket Board has named former captain Shahid Afridi as interim chief selector of the men’s team and ex-internationals Abdul Razzaq and Rao Iftikhar as members of the selection panel.

Najam Sethi, new chairman of the PCB’s management committee, dissolved the previous committee that was headed by Mohammad Wasim.

Sethi fired Ramiz Raja as PCB chairman on Thursday after the government appointed a management committee to form a new governing board within four months.

Former test player Haroon Rasheed, one of 14 members in the new interim management committee, was named as convenor of the selection committee.

Wasim, a former Pakistan middle-order batter, was appointed in 2020 and was expected to stay until next year’s 50-over World Cup in India.

Sethi welcomed Afridi as head of the selection panel and hoped the committee “will make brave and bold decisions that will help us produce a strong and competitive side in the series against New Zealand.”

Pakistan has already announced a 16-strong squad for the two-test series against New Zealand that starts on Monday, and it was not clear whether the new selection committee will now make changes.

Flamboyant Afridi scored 11,196 runs and took 541 wickets with his leg-spin bowling in his 27 test matches, 398 ODIs and 99 Twenty20s. He also captained the team in 83 international games. He was a member of the team which won the 2009 T20 World Cup in England.

“We need to get back to winning ways,” Afridi said in a statement. “I have no doubts that through meritocratic and strategic selection decisions we will help the national side to perform strongly in the series against New Zealand and reclaim the confidence of our fans.”

New Zealand will be playing its first international games in Pakistan since 2003 when it last toured the country for a limited-overs series.

Pakistan suffered a 3-0 clean sweep against England last week, its first whitewash at home in a series featuring three or more test matches.


Sixth Dakar Rally win for Al-Attiyah as Benavides triumphs on two wheels

Updated 17 January 2026
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Sixth Dakar Rally win for Al-Attiyah as Benavides triumphs on two wheels

Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah won ​the Dakar Rally for the sixth time in the car category on Saturday as Argentina’s Luciano Benavides won by two seconds on two wheels, the narrowest margin ever.

Al-Attiyah, with Belgian co-driver Fabian Lurquin, had led overnight after taking his 50th career stage win and made no mistakes as he handed Dacia a first victory at their second attempt in the two-week event ‌held entirely ‌in Saudi Arabia.

The 55-year-old Qatari also won ‌in ⁠2011, ​2015, ‌2019, 2022 and 2023.

Ford’s Nani Roma finished second, nine minutes and 42 seconds behind, and teammate Mattias Ekstrom was third after winning the final stage.

Last year’s winner Yazeed Al-Rajhi of Saudi Arabia withdrew in the opening week after mechanical problems.

Benavides had earlier taken the motorcycle title after American Ricky Brabec lost his way and saw ⁠victory slip through his fingers.

The KTM rider, whose older brother Kevin won the Dakar ‌in 2021 and 2023, came home second ‍in the 105-km stage in ‍Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea port of Yanbu, with Honda’s overnight ‍leader Brabec 10th.

In a grueling endurance event spanning two weeks and 8,000km over rocky roads, through canyons and vast expanses of desert dunes, twice winner Brabec blew his chances with only a few kilometers ​remaining.

Spaniard Tosha Schareina finished third overall for Honda.

“From the start to the finish I never stopped dreaming, I ⁠never stopped believing,” said Benavides, who had trailed Brabec by three minutes and 20 seconds after Friday’s penultimate stage.

“I said to all my people around ‘I don’t know why but I still feel it’s possible, I still believe I can win and it’s going to go my way’.

“In the last three kilometers, Ricky took a wrong piste and I took a good one... I just saw the opportunity and I took it.”

American Skyler Howes was fourth overall for Honda, ahead of Australia’s 2025 champion Daniel Sanders on a ‌KTM.

Sanders crashed on stage 10 but refused to retire and raced on despite a suspected broken collarbone.