Key Points

The Pakistan Cricket Board has threatened to withdraw from their next Asia Cup match unless the ICC removes match referee Andy Pycroft. This follows Pycroft's alleged instruction to both captains to avoid shaking hands before the toss. The PCB claims the referee failed to enforce proper sportsmanship standards and MCC rules during the India-Pakistan match. Sources indicate the PCB's international cricket director was suspended for delaying the formal protest letter.

Key Points: Pakistan Threatens Asia Cup Boycott Over ICC Referee Handshake Snub

  • PCB threatens to boycott next Asia Cup match over referee controversy
  • Match referee advised against handshake between Pakistan and India captains
  • ICC accused of failing to enforce sportsmanship and MCC rules
  • PCB director suspended for delaying protest letter submission
3 min read

Asia Cup: Pakistan threaten to boycott next match if ICC fails to act against match referee in handshake snub saga

PCB demands ICC remove match referee Andy Pycroft after India handshake controversy, threatening to boycott next Asia Cup match over alleged misconduct.

"How can a match referee tell a captain not to shake hands with the other captain? - PCB Letter to ICC"

Dubai, Sep 15

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has threatened to pull out it's team from their next match of the ongoing Men' T20 Asia Cup 2025 if the International Cricket Council (ICC) does not pull out match referee Andy Pycroft for his alleged inappropriate handling of things during Sunday's match and the handshake snub by the Indian players.

The PCB has objected to Pycrift telling it's captain Salman Ali Agha not to shake hands with India skipper Suryakumar Yadav at the toss and claims he failed to dissuade the Indians from engaging is behavior contrary to sportsmanship and spirit of the game.

The PCB threatened to boycott their next match in the Asia Cup in their letter to the ICC seeking Pycroft's removal as a match referee, according to a report in Telecom Asia Sport.

"It is learnt that Pakistan has threatened, in the letter, that they will boycott the next match if Pycroft is not removed," said the report in www telecomasia.net.

Sources also told Telecom Asia Sport that Usman Wahla, PCB’s director for international cricket, has been suspended for delaying the protest letter.

Pakistan Cricket Board has filed a strong protest with the ICC and the Asian Cricket Council against match referee Pycroft.

The Zimbabwean, who served as match referee, took Agha to one side before the toss and advised him not to try a handshake with Suryakumar.

“How can a match referee tell a captain not to shake hands with the other captain?” the letter asked.

The report said that the PCB letter has claimed that Pycroft took Suryakumar to one side and conveyed to him the same message about no handshake. “Pycroft told the same thing to the Indian skipper and later told the Pakistan team media manager not to record his conversation and movement," the report quoted a PCB source as saying.

The report also claimed that Pycroft and Tournament Director Andre Russell told Cheema that no handshake was as per the policy of Indian government and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and they were bound to follow that.

Cheema, sources said, conveyed the rules of MCC which said handshake and proper behaviour are mandatory for the teams while playing a match.

The PCB has also quoted the same MCC rules and argued that Pycrift failed to ensure implementation of the rules and therefore should be removed as match referee.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Actually, the match referee was wrong to interfere. Handshake is basic sportsmanship. If BCCI has a policy against it, they should state it clearly rather than making match officials do their dirty work. 🤝
A
Aman W
Boycotting matches over handshakes? Seriously? Both boards need to grow up. Fans want to watch cricket, not political dramas. Sort this out behind closed doors.
S
Sarah B
As a cricket lover from abroad, this is disappointing to see. The spirit of cricket seems to be getting lost in India-Pakistan tensions. The game should unite, not divide.
V
Vikram M
PCB is right to stand up for sportsmanship. If MCC rules mandate handshakes, then everyone should follow them. No special treatment for anyone, regardless of which country they represent.
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Nikhil C
Why are we even discussing handshakes when there's cricket to be played? Both teams should focus on their game and let the administrators handle these formalities. Too much drama! 😒

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