In a post on X, Sethi, who served as PCB chief from December 2022 to June 2023, expressed that the nation’s frustration over the national team’s poor performance is justified. Hosts Pakistan have been knocked out of the Champions Trophy 2025 following consecutive defeats.
“The cricket fraternity says Pakistan has hit rock bottom. How come a cricket team that was once no 1 in T20s (2018) and Tests (2016) and ODIs (1990 and 1996), which won the WC in 1992 and CT in 2017, is today equated with Zimbabwe?” According to Sethi, the downfall started in 2019 when a new management under a new PM/Patron (Imran Khan was prime minister at that time and had brought in Ehsan Mani as PCB chairman) changed the domestic cricket structure that had served Pakistan reasonably well for decades and replaced it with an ill-suited Australian hybrid model.
“Political interference continued; contradictory PCB policies became the norm— foreign coaches were hired and sent packing, selectors were whimsically nominated, old discards were recruited to mentor and manage.
“Finally, player power, clash of captain egos and groupings in the team came to prevail over fumbling management! The horrible result is before us,” Sethi wrote.
He said Pakistan can certainly restore its cricket fortunes if everyone recognises the nature of the problems and marshals the integrity, experience, knowledge and professionalism required to do the job.
Soon after Imran became PM, Sethi resigned from the PCB.
This paved the way for the appointment of Ehsan Mani, a former ICC president.
In 2019, the PCB on the directions of Imran revamped the domestic cricket structure ending the old system of 16-18 departmental and regional association sides competing in domestic cricket events and a six-team first class structure was introduced.
Imran later also appointed Ramiz Raja as chairman in 2021 when Mani excused himself from accepting an extension of his contract. Ramiz was replaced in December 2022 after the fall of the Imran Khan government by Sethi.
(With PTI inputs)