Vaughan calls for probe into reports Pakistan stars sidelined from Hundred

Pakistan's Faheem Ashraf celebrates his team's win against Netherlands at the end of their 2026 ICC Men's T20 Cricket World Cup group stage match in the Sinhalese Sports Club (SSC) Ground of Colombo on February 7, 2026. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 February 2026
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Vaughan calls for probe into reports Pakistan stars sidelined from Hundred

  • The Hundred is an English 100-ball-per-side franchise cricket competition with eight teams
  • BBC says Indian-owned teams may avoid selecting Pakistani players at next month’s auction

LONDON: Michael Vaughan has urged the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) to “act fast” on reports that Pakistani players will be overlooked by Indian-owned teams in the domestic Hundred competition.

Longstanding political tensions between India and Pakistan have led to the border rivals only playing each other in international cricket events, although their recent Colombo showdown at the ongoing T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka only went ahead after Pakistan called off a threatened boycott.

It has been claimed that politics has also led to an effective ban on Pakistani players participating in the Indian Premier League, world cricket’s most lucrative T20 franchise competition.

And with several IPL owners now owning teams in several different countries, opportunities for Pakistani cricketers to participate in various leagues are in danger of being reduced further.

The BBC has now reported that the issue could be a factor during next month’s player auction for English cricket’s Hundred, a 100 balls-per-side competition featuring eight franchises rather than the traditional 18 first-class counties.

Players will go under the hammer in London on March 11-12, with the BBC reporting that the four Indian-affiliated Hundred teams — Manchester Super Giants, MI London, Southern Brave and Sunrisers Leeds will deliberately avoid selecting players from Pakistan.

More than 50 Pakistani cricketers have registered their availability, with four other teams involved in the bidding.

The ECB have been unable to substantiate the BBC allegations, but former England captain Vaughan has called for the governing body to investigate the issue thoroughly.

Vaughan, referencing the ECB’s stated aim of cricket becoming the most inclusive sport in the country, posted on Friday on X: “The ECB need to act fast on this... they own the league and this should not be allowed to happen... the most inclusive sport in the country is not one that allows this to happen.”

An ECB spokesman said: “The Hundred welcomes men’s and women’s players from all over the world and we would expect the eight teams to reflect that.

“Almost 1,000 cricketers from 18 nations have registered for The Hundred auction, with representation on the longlist of over 50 players respectively from Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Pakistan and West Indies.”

Only two Pakistan internationals — Mohammad Amir and Imad Wasim — — appeared in last year’s Hundred, the final edition before new investors became involved.


Pakistan stocks fall amid Afghanistan tensions, recover from intraday lows

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Pakistan stocks fall amid Afghanistan tensions, recover from intraday lows

  • Index drops as much as 3,081 points before paring losses after no retaliation reported from Kabul
  • Banking and energy stocks drag benchmark lower as regional tensions weigh on investor sentiment 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s benchmark KSE-100 index fell on Friday amid escalating tensions with Afghanistan as Pakistan bombed government targets in Kabul and Kandahar where the Afghan Taliban leadership is based, triggering early selling pressure before the market recovered from sharp intraday losses.

The strikes marked a significant escalation in cross-border tensions between Islamabad and Kabul, raising concerns about potential retaliation and broader regional instability. The development comes at a time when relations between the two sides have been strained for months over security issues along the border and militant attacks in Pakistan that it blames on Afghan-based groups. Kabul denies it harbors such outfits. 

Heightened geopolitical risk tends to weigh on investor sentiment, particularly in emerging markets, as uncertainty over security and diplomatic fallout can prompt risk-off positioning and capital outflows. Traders said investors reacted swiftly to the headlines, pricing in the possibility of further escalation.

“KSE 100 Index opened on a negative note and declined to make an intraday low of -3,081 points (down by -1.82 percent), this negativity can be accredited to regional tension with Afghanistan, where Pakistan targeted key military installation of Afghanistan Taliban regime in Kabul,” brokerage house Topline Securities said in its market review.

The index dropped as much as 3,081 points, or 1.82 percent, during the session before recovering part of the losses after no retaliatory strikes were reported.

It settled at 168,062 points, down 0.49 percent on the day.

Losses were led by United Bank Limited, Fauji Fertilizer Company, Oil and Gas Development Company, Pakistan Petroleum Limited and MCB Bank Limited, which together shaved 658 points off the index.

National Bank of Pakistan, MCB Bank, Pakistan Petroleum Limited, Bank of Punjab and Bank Alfalah led trading by value.

Traded volume and value for the day stood at 533 million shares and 25.5 billion respectively.

Separately, a brokerage house said Pakistan’s headline inflation is likely to rise to around 7.4 percent in February ahead of the State Bank of Pakistan’s March 9 monetary policy meeting.

“Headline inflation is estimated at ~7.4 percent for Feb’26, compared to ~1.5 percent in SPLY and ~5.8 percent in preceding month,” Insight Research said. “The increase in mainly driven by low base effect.”