Pakistan cricketers fined after failing to reach Twenty20 World Cup semifinals — report

Pakistan's Abrar Ahmed reacts during the 2026 ICC Men's T20 Cricket World Cup Super Eights match between Sri Lanka and Pakistan at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium in Kandy on February 28, 2026. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 03 March 2026
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Pakistan cricketers fined after failing to reach Twenty20 World Cup semifinals — report

  • PCB links financial benefits to performance after fourth straight ICC semifinal exit
  • Fine reportedly imposed despite record-breaking tournament from Sahibzada Farhan

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Cricket Board has reportedly fined players around $18,000 each after the team failed to qualify for Twenty20 World Cup semifinals.

PCB “officials have clearly told the players that enough pampering has been done — from now on, financial benefits will only come with performance,” the Express Tribune reported Tuesday.

According to the report, the PCB decided to fine the players after Pakistan lost a group-stage match to archrival India on Feb. 15. However, after the team qualified for the Super Eight stage the players were told the fine could be waived if Pakistan reached the semifinals.

Pakistan needed to beat co-host Sri Lanka by 65 runs in the last group match to qualify for final four ahead of New Zealand, but instead it narrowly scraped to a five-run win.

The report said PCB officials told the playing group that if they accepted rewards for good performances, “they must also pay penalties for poor ones.”

The fines reportedly included at least one outstanding performer — Sahibzada Farhan — who broke India great Virat Kohli’s record for most runs in a T20 World Cup and finished the tournament with 383 runs, featuring two centuries and two half centuries.

The sport’s national governing body did not respond to a request for comment.

It was the fourth successive major ICC tournament where Pakistan has missed the semifinals. Pakistan also hasn’t beaten India in a major event since 2022.

Soon after losing the last year’s Asia Cup final to India, the PCB briefly suspended permission for players participating in T20 leagues around the world but later allowed the players to compete in tournaments like Australia’s Big Bash.

Last year, the PCB abolished category A in its list of 30 centrally contracted players, and demoted both Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam in category B.


Pakistan plans overhaul of agricultural research system to boost exports, food security

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Pakistan plans overhaul of agricultural research system to boost exports, food security

  • Government says research institutions must move beyond siloed structures, speed up commercialization
  • Officials say national research agenda should be aligned with export targets and development priorities

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is planning a comprehensive overhaul of its agricultural research system to improve productivity, strengthen food security and increase export competitiveness, said an official statement on Wednesday.

Federal Minister for National Food Security and Research Rana Tanveer Hussain discussed the reform plan during a meeting with Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (PARC) Chairman Syed Murtaza Hassan Andrabi, it said.

The initiative comes as Pakistan seeks to modernize its agriculture sector, which contributes about a fifth of the country’s economic output and employs a large share of its workforce but has long struggled with low productivity and weak technology adoption.

Hussain said the reform would address inefficiencies caused by overlapping mandates between federal and provincial research institutions and encourage closer collaboration across scientific disciplines.

“Research must move beyond siloed structures and adopt cross-disciplinary approaches, ensuring practical and commercially viable outcomes,” the minister said.

He also stressed the need to accelerate technology transfer from laboratories to farms and markets, noting that innovations such as vaccines had historically taken years to reach commercialization.

PARC chairman Andrabi said the country’s research priorities should directly support economic and food security objectives.

“Pakistan’s national research agendas must be aligned with export targets and food security goals, ensuring that all research efforts directly contribute to national priorities,” he said.

Under the reform plan, Pakistan will establish specialized Centers of Excellence focusing on climate-resilient crops, livestock improvement, food processing, artificial intelligence and precision agriculture, as well as sustainable land and water management.

The government also plans to introduce a Digital National Agricultural Research Information System (NARIS) platform to serve as a centralized repository for research data and collaboration among institutions.

Officials said a new scientific advisory committee, comprising both local and international experts, would be formed to guide strategic priorities and benchmark Pakistan’s research system against global standards.