Category: 6. Sports

  • IOC donates share of Gangwon 2024 surplus to support legacy initiatives

    IOC donates share of Gangwon 2024 surplus to support legacy initiatives

    Gangwon 2024 surplus distribution

    In line with the host contract, the surplus of KRW 1.85 billion, resulting from the planning, organising, financing and staging of the YOG, will be between the National Olympic Committee (20 per cent), the YOGOC (60 per cent) – to be used exclusively for the development of sport in the host territory – and the IOC (20 per cent).

    The IOC has confirmed that its share of the surplus, amounting to KRW 0.37 billion, will be donated to the PyeongChang Legacy Foundation, reinforcing its ongoing commitment to Olympic legacies and positively impacting the region through sport. The YOGOC has also designated its share, amounting to KRW 1.11 billion, to the same foundation.

    Strong Gangwon 2024 financial results

    The YOGOC, in its dissolution phase, confirmed its total operational expenses amounted to KRW 74.26 billion (approximately USD 53.9 million), while revenues reached KRW 76.11 billion (approximately USD 55.3 million). The positive financial results reflect the effective management of resources and the strong coordination between organisers and stakeholders.

    The IOC considerably supported the success of Gangwon 2024 with an investment of USD 34.1 million.

    The YOGOC also managed additional activities on behalf of the government and related organisations, which provided KRW 20.11 billion in extra funding for responsibilities falling outside the YOG requirements.

    The Gangwon 2024 Winter YOG took place from 19 January to 1 February 2024 and brought together 1,802 athletes from 78 National Olympic Committees. The next edition of the Summer YOG will be held in Dakar, Senegal, from 31 October to 13 November 2026, followed by the Winter YOG in 2028 in Italy’s Dolomiti Valtellina region.

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  • British and Irish Lions 2025: Tadhg Beirne to captain against Waratahs in Sydney

    British and Irish Lions 2025: Tadhg Beirne to captain against Waratahs in Sydney

    On a day in Sydney dominated by coach Andy Farrell calling up his son, Owen, as replacement for the injured Elliot Daly, Irishman Tadhg Beirne was named as captain of the British and Irish Lions team to play the Waratahs in Sydney on Saturday.

    In a team showing 14 changes from the one that saw off the Queensland Reds in Brisbane, Hugo Keenan will make his first appearance at full-back with wing Blair Kinghorn also making his Lions debut.

    Huw Jones, the only player going back-to-back from Brisbane, starts alongside his Scotland midfield partner Sione Tuipulotu for the first time on tour. The Northampton half-backs, Fin Smith and Alex Mitchell, take over from Finn Russell and Jamison Gibson-Park. Henry Pollock is back in the line-up at blindside.

    The Lions packed up and moved on from Brisbane to Sydney where the news about Farrell’s call-up began to emerge. Farrell, a fly-half-cum-inside centre, replaced the deeply unfortunate Daly, a wing-cum-full-back-cum-outside centre.

    It is a hugely controversial call by his father and his fellow coaches given he isn’t exactly a like-for-like switch.

    Farrell, 33, has recently left Racing and returned to Saracens after an unhappy spell in France. He hasn’t played any rugby since getting concussed in a game against Lyon on 4 May. He only lasted 18 minutes that day, and hasn’t played since.

    An undoubtedly great player in his day, Farrell hasn’t played Test rugby since England’s bronze medal game against Argentina at the World Cup in October 2023, a whopping 615 days ago. At the time he said he was taking the decision to stand back from the Test arena in order to focus on his and his family’s mental well-being.

    British and Irish Lions: Keenan, Hansen, Jones, Tuipulotu, Kinghorn, Smith, Mitchell; Schoeman, Cowan-Dickie, Bealham, Beirne, Ryan, Pollock, Van der Flier, Earl

    Replacements: Sheehan, Genge, Furlong, McCarthy, Cummings. Morgan, White, M Smith

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  • Four Edinburgh Rugby players selected for Maori All Blacks opener – Edinburgh Rugby

    1. Four Edinburgh Rugby players selected for Maori All Blacks opener  Edinburgh Rugby
    2. Scotland v Maori All Blacks: Stafford McDowall captains side  BBC
    3. Ex-Howe of Fife scrum-half George Horne named as one of two vice-captains for Scottish national rugby team’s game v Maori All Blacks on Saturday  Fife Today
    4. Alec Hepburn named in Scotland squad for Maori clash  Scarlets Rugby
    5. How To Watch Māori All Blacks vs. Scotland Rugby  FloRugby

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  • Dan Evans returns to Wimbledon’s Centre Court, a year on from sacrificing his career

    Dan Evans returns to Wimbledon’s Centre Court, a year on from sacrificing his career

    The Athletic has live coverage from Day 4 at Wimbledon 2025. 

    THE ALL ENGLAND CLUB, LONDON — This time a year ago, British tennis player Dan Evans had a decision to make. He could play the 2024 Paris Olympic Games and partner two-time Wimbledon champion Andy Murray in his final event, or he could defend his Citi Open title in Washington D.C.. The former was the romantic option, but missing the latter would mean 500 points coming off his ranking.

    That would send Evans tumbling more than 100 spots toward the bottom end of the world’s top 200, taking away his automatic entry to top-tier tennis events. He would have to drop down to the second-tier ATP Challenger Tour, which is not where any former world No. 21 wants to be, especially in their mid-30s.

    This was no quandary for Evans. He chose the Olympics without hesitation and in so doing helped — and at times carried — Murray to two valedictory victories, both from multiple match points down. They didn’t win a medal, but the matches were unforgettable. It’s impossible to quantify a sporting experience like that.

    It is much easier to quantify what they meant for Evans’ career — and it wasn’t pretty. After winning the longest match in U.S. Open history by defeating Karen Khachanov in the first round, he settled into his new reality. His first event after New York was the Nonthaburi Challenger in Thailand. In February, he bounced from Bahrain one week to Glasgow, Scotland the next. By the end of March, he was ranked outside the world’s top 200.

    Evans knew what he was sacrificing to play with Murray, but the resultant destruction of his late career still hurt. At Wimbledon 12 months ago, he said that he’d consider retirement if he needed a wild card to enter.


    Murray and Evans formed an entertaining double act at the Paris Olympics. (Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)

    After a year of struggle — and taking the wild card that he never wanted to need — Evans will face the 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic on Centre Court at Wimbledon, in a moment that feels as close to tennis karma as can exist. Not that Evans sees it that way. “I think if I believed in karma, I’d be in a bit of trouble,” he said in a news conference Tuesday, after beating Jay Clarke to set up the opportunity to face Djokovic.

    It was a throwaway line, but one that is in keeping with Evans’ character through every stage of his career.

    In his early days, Evans, who stands at 5 feet 9 inches (175cm) but is blessed with excellent hands and a devastating slice, looked as though he wasn’t going to make the most of his talent. The Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) took away his funding for four months in 2008, when he was in a nightclub until 3 a.m. with his doubles partner before a junior match at Wimbledon. It cut his funding again in 2010 and 2012, because of question marks over his attitude and commitment. Evans then failed to turn up for a third-tier ITF event in 2015, and was fined £350.

    When he finally started to put it together, reaching the Wimbledon and U.S. Open third rounds in 2016 and then the last 16 at the following year’s Australian Open, Evans imploded. He tested positive for cocaine in April 2017, a month after reaching a career-high ranking of No. 41, and was banned for a year. It could have been a precipice for his career, but Evans instead returned with a renewed focus.

    After beating Denis Istomin from two sets down in a thrilling Davis Cup tie that September, Evans fought back tears and later said that he had feared he would never play again. The following April, Roger Federer invited “Danny” — as he called the Brit — to Switzerland to train with him. After beating Evans in four sets at the Australian Open a few months earlier, Federer had been so impressed with his opponent’s game, full of slice and forays to the net, that he described him as a ‘mirror’ of himself.

    Evans climbed to that career-high rank of No. 21 in 2023, and even beat Thursday’s opponent Djokovic at the Monte Carlo Masters in 2021 in their only meeting to date. “I think when they do the stats, it has to be over, like, three matches to have a 100 percent record, so we’ll say I have a decent record,” Evans joked ahead of their meeting.


    Evans celebrates after beating Novak Djokovic at the 2021 Monte Carlo Masters. (Valery Hache / AFP via Getty Images)

    Born and raised in Birmingham, the son of a nurse and an electrician, Evans did not come from the British tennis heartlands of south-west London and Surrey.

    “It’d be cool to see a guy coming up and his parents are painters and decorators,” he told the Daily Mail in 2023. “That would interest me where his career went. It doesn’t interest me seeing how a career goes of a guy with wealthy parents.”

    Evans’ directness appears to come from wanting to raise standards — his own and those of his compatriots. Whenever he’s asked whether some good results for British players at Wimbledon signal a meaningful change, his answer is always the same. It’s not about doing it at Wimbledon for a match or two; it’s the other 50 weeks of the year that define a tennis player.

    Those 50 weeks in the past year have been some of the roughest of Evans’ career, and he has been emotional during his recent grass-court matches. He cried during his quarterfinal run in Eastbourne, off the back of beating Frances Tiafoe at the HSBC Championships a week earlier, and did so again during his pre-Wimbledon press conference.

    “It’s been awful basically,” Evans said Saturday of his year in the tennis wilderness.

    “It’s not … It’s not the matches, it’s, uh … It’s when you feel like you let people down, that’s the tougher thing about it,” he said as the tears started to flow.

    “I have no idea why I’m getting upset. But you go home to your wife and she travels. You see the kids — not my kids obviously — and (they ask), ‘Did you win?’ Just stupid things … you just feel a bit, you’re not used to losing. That’s probably more of the thing.

    “I don’t worry about retirement, but it’s just different, isn’t it? So to start losing and stuff like that, it’s scary at the end of the day to know sometimes you’re not good enough and that’s not an easy thing in sport to not be good enough.”

    Evans said Tuesday that the last year has been “equally as difficult” as when he was serving his drugs ban and feared his career was over, but that he would never go back on his decision to play the Olympic Games.

    “The 500 points and winning Washington, that was a great experience. But, and I probably shouldn’t say this as I’m asking for a wild card, but the feeling of going out to play in the quarterfinals with Andy was a lot different to playing in Washington.

    “That’s just a fact, and everybody’s behind you at the Olympics, so I never think about it like that. I’ve never woken and I thought, ‘Jeez, what have you done there?’ It’s always been a really proud moment. If I got a chance to do it again, I’d do it again.”

    After getting into a rare ATP Tour-level event in Dubai in February, where Khachanov dispatched him in straight sets, Evans despaired at his form, saying that “it was a massive eye-opener” after being away from the elite. Ranked No. 154, Evans is a long way from where he was. But even if he doesn’t believe in karma, maybe the tennis gods, who have delivered him a shot at the greatest male player of all time at his home major, do.

    “It’s what you play tennis for, isn’t it? To play the top players in the biggest tournaments,” Evans said.

    “I’m really looking forward to it.”

    (Top photo: Ben Stansall/AFP via Getty Images)

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  • Felipe Drugovich to step in for Nyck de Vries at Mahindra in Berlin

    Felipe Drugovich to step in for Nyck de Vries at Mahindra in Berlin

    The Brazilian rising star will step into the #21 car in place of de Vries, who has a pre-existing commitment to race in the FIA World Endurance Championship on the same weekend, for the double-header in the German capital.

    To fans of single-seater racing, the 25-year-old from Maringá, Brazil needs little introduction. Drugovich enjoyed a silverware-laden rise through the junior ranks, including championship titles in Euroformula Open and the FIA Formula 2 Championship.

    WATCH: Follow all the action from Berlin live

    More recently, Drugovich has balanced his commitments as a Reserve Driver for Aston Martin in Formula 1 alongside several sportscar appearances, including IMSA, ELMS and an appearance at last year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans.

    “I’m very happy to confirm I will be making my Formula E debut with Mahindra Racing in Berlin,” he says. “Formula E is a championship I’ve been around for a while now; having tested on several occasions, I’m excited to now get the opportunity to race.

    CALENDAR: Sync the dates and don’t miss a lap of Season 11

    “Mahindra Racing is a fantastic team, one of the championship’s standout names, and it’s clear from their recent results that the new car is a significant step forward. I’m looking forward to working closely with them to prepare for Berlin, and I’m sure we can have a good weekend together.”

    With an impressive 47 race victories and a further 71 podium finishes across his career to-date, Drugovich will now turn his talents towards his competitive debut in Formula E. He recently completed a successful test for the team at Circuito Guadix, Spain, to gain crucial mileage in the team’s Mahindra M11Electro, built to Formula E’s latest GEN3 Evo regulations.

    He is also no stranger to the Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit, having participated in the last two Formula E Rookie Tests at the same venue, topping the times in the 2023 edition.

    Drugovich will be hoping to add to Mahindra Racing’s ever-improving run of form. The team currently sits fifth in the standings after 12 races of Season 11, with podiums in Monaco and Jakarta, plus a one-hundred percent record for making the qualifying Duels and scoring points in almost every race.

    Drugovich’s team-mate for the Berlin weekend will be Mahindra Racing’s other regular driver, Edoardo Mortara.

    Mahindra Racing CEO and Team Principal, Frederic Bertrand, added: “It’s very exciting to be able to welcome Felipe to the team for the Berlin E-Prix. “It’s been on our radar for a while now that we would need to find a solution for Berlin to substitute for Nyck.

    “Felipe quickly emerged as the standout candidate, his achievements speak for themselves, and he’s been very impressive when he’s tested a Formula E car in the past.

    “The benefit of having this confirmed so far in advance is that we have had plenty of time to get him fully integrated with the team, to prepare him properly for the race weekend and give him the best opportunity to go out and showcase what he can do.”

    Find out more

    CALENDAR: Sync the dates and don’t miss a lap of Season 11

    WATCH: Find out where to watch every Formula E race via stream or on TV in your country

    TICKETS: Secure your grandstand seats and buy Formula E race tickets

    SCHEDULE: Here’s every race of the 2024/25 Formula E season

    HIGHLIGHTS: Catch up with every race from all 10 seasons of Formula E IN FULL

    PREDICTOR: Get involved, predict race results and win exclusive prizes

    HOSPITALITY: Experience Formula E and world class motorsport as a VIP

    FOLLOW: Download the Formula E App on iOS or Android

     

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  • Maggie Alphonsi’s RWC 2025 Guide to Twickenham

    Maggie Alphonsi’s RWC 2025 Guide to Twickenham

    A packed Allianz Stadium for the final of Rugby World Cup 2025 is a dream Maggie Alphonsi cannot wait to realise. But just as much as the match itself, the RWC 2014 winner is looking forward to welcoming fans from all over the world to her city. 

    Here, Alphonsi delivers an insider’s guide to making the very most of time in Twickenham, Richmond and the rest of London – whether you are a first-time visitor, a returning fan or even a curious local. 

    Twickenham & Richmond on matchday:

    What I absolutely love is seeing the area come to life. Seeing the various different jerseys. It’s a very positive, upbeat environment. I love the uniqueness that Twickenham and Richmond bring. It’s very relaxed. People stroll up the river, if they are coming from the Richmond way and you know, casually pop into one of the eateries or pubs.

    It’s a whole day out, you are not just going out for one event. People really bask in the rugby setting, the rugby vibe, the rugby event.

    What I love on match day as well is how connected the fans are to the players. I love seeing the players get off the coach and everyone is waiting outside. Seeing the anticipation, the excitement and the happiness in people’s faces, it’s very cool.

    I love now being a spectator.

    Pre-match routine:

    I get off (the train) at Twickenham Station and walk down the road everyone walks down (Whitton Road).

    I have a proper lunch at Bella Vita, grab a pizza and then walk to the Cabbage Patch. That’s the iconic place to go, there’s always space there There’s a beer garden. I always know I am going to meet someone. It’s a very rugby vibe. I love it. Everyone comes out the train station and it’s ready to welcome you.

    Then stop in The Scrummery (pub). It’s really busy, it’s hard to get a seat but if you can, stop in. If you can’t, stand outside and get a photo. 

    Twickenham RWC 2025 match schedule pic

    Where to eat, drink and watch RWC 2025 matches on TV:

    There’s a really good pub in Richmond, the Rising Sun. It’s very rugby. I mean now and then you might find Jason Leonard (former England international and British & Irish Lion) at the bar. And I’ll be very clear, I’m not really a drinker, so I don’t go to the pubs to drink, it’s just a social thing. It’s not far from the train station, just down a back road. It’s great.

    I would also go to Richmond Rugby Club. It will be showing the games. I always think clubhouses are very welcoming during big tournaments. It’s got a really good social side. Great women’s teams too.

    Must-visit community rugby clubs:

    I have to start with my Saracens Amateur RFC (Maggie’s old club). Very welcoming set-up there, very good family environment.

    Grasshoppers Rugby Club is a very, very nice family club, family setting.

    Southwark Tigers is really interesting. It’s south London, a different part of London.

    Top tips for London visitors:

    Go and watch a show. Must do that. Immerse yourself into the theatre scene. My top one is the Lion King, closely followed by Hamilton, and then ending on Six.

    Second thing, I find London is awesome when you just go to the markets and check them out. Camden Market is awesome. Portobello Market is cool, the street food. There’s a real buzz, vibe going on. I love London for the variety of cultures, the melting pot that is going on. 

    RWC 2025 Trophy London Bridge pic

    And then one of the things I’ve loved is going to get on a boat, a speed boat and doing a tour up the Thames. It’s cool to learn about London via the water.

    It’s going to be a phenomenal time to welcome all these different nations over to England and put on a good show. We’re very good at hosting tournaments, and I just think we will do a great job.

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  • PCB names 30 players for U19 skills assessment camp ahead of Asia, World Cup – Cricket

    PCB names 30 players for U19 skills assessment camp ahead of Asia, World Cup – Cricket

    Undated picture of Pakistan U19 cricketers. — PCB

    LAHORE: The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Thursday announced the selection of 30 players for the third phase of the U19 Skills Assessment camp, set to begin in Multan on July seven and run through the end of August.

    This phase follows a comprehensive match-based assessment conducted in two earlier stages, where a total of 65 players were evaluated under the supervision of former Test captain and current Head of Youth Development, Azhar Ali.

    Of the 30 players selected for the next phase, 20 were shortlisted based on their performances in the first two phases. Ten additional players, who have previously represented Pakistan U19 and remain eligible for the ICC U19 World Cup 2026, have also been included.

    The third phase of the camp is designed to further enhance the players’ technical and mental skills ahead of the ACC U19 Asia Cup and ICC U19 World Cup.

    It is pertinent to mention that the Skills Development Camp for 47 senior Pakistan cricketers was also held in three phases at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Lahore from June 30 to July four.

    Selected U19 players for skills assessment camp:

    Abdul Subhan, Ahmed Hussain, Abbas Khan, Abdul Wahab, Ali Hassan Baloch, Asad Umar, Daniyal Ali Khan, Ghulam Haider, Hamza Zahoor, Haroon Khan, Hazrat Ali, Huzaifa Ahsan, Ibtisam Azhar, Mohammad Arshad, Mohammad Abbas Afridi, Niqab Shafiq, Rana Adeel Mushtaq, Rizwanullah, Saad Sakhawat, Sadeeq Aman, Sameer Minhas and Yahya Shah, Farhan Yousaf, Hassan Khan, Mohammad Huzaifa, Mohammad Tahir, Momin Qamar, Tayyab Arif, Umar Zaib and Usman Khan.

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  • “Beating cancer helps me live in the moment”

    “Beating cancer helps me live in the moment”

    How beating cancer helps Ann-Katrin Berger ‘live in the moment’

    Berger has more than just hard work behind her.

    In 2017, and then again in 2022, she had to undergo surgery and subsequently therapy following a diagnosis of thyroid cancer.

    Her fight has given the goalkeeper the inspiration to live in the moment, on and off the field. She is no longer worried about making mistakes, nor does she want to overthink when she is between the sticks.

    “I try to live, react, and act in the moment,” she explains to us.

    “If I think too much, it will ruin my style of play – that’s why I’ve never thought like that before, and I hope that I never will.

    “In general, I don’t look so far into the future. No matter what I do, I just look at what’s in front of me. In football, you don’t know what’s going to happen – and due to my illness, I don’t know whether I might be able to continue tomorrow or not.”

    As far as Berger is concerned, some things are simply more important than playing with a ball.

    Her experiences have helped shift perspective, she continues: “Football is just a game, there are worse things in the world. In the past, football was the be-all, end-all for me. There was nothing better and nothing more important.

    “The illness has made me a bit calmer… I still hate losing, but I lose and walk away from the game after doing my best for 90 or 120 minutes, then that’s enough for me now.

    “It’s best to leave the pitch as a winner, but as I said, there are bigger things out there that are more important.”

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  • Arvid Lindblad excited for FP1 debut with Red Bull at Silverstone as he hails ‘amazing opportunity’

    Arvid Lindblad excited for FP1 debut with Red Bull at Silverstone as he hails ‘amazing opportunity’

    Arvid Lindblad is expecting his FP1 debut with Red Bull to be a “very special moment”, with the British driver set to get behind the wheel of Yuki Tsunoda’s RB21 in front of his home crowd at Silverstone.

    After being granted a Super Licence in June, the Formula 2 racer will make his first F1 weekend appearance when he drives for Red Bull during Friday’s first practice session at the British Grand Prix.

    The 17-year-old is keen to get going and has hailed the experience as “an amazing opportunity”, having long been a part of the Red Bull Junior Programme.

    “I am very excited to be driving during FP1, driving in an official F1 session is going to be a very special moment,” said Lindblad. “It is something I have dreamt of for a long time.

    “To get a first taste of F1 with Oracle Red Bull Racing as well, after being with the Junior Programme for almost five years, is really special to me. This is an amazing opportunity, and I am super grateful to everybody at Oracle Red Bull Racing for it.

    “And to be making my F1 debut as a British driver, on a British track, in front of a British crowd, is going to be really amazing.

    “My aim is to get up to speed in the car really quickly, get Yuki good data to help him across the weekend, lead the team in a good direction and try to drive quickly as well! I can’t wait to hit the track and get going.”

    Lindblad currently competes for Campos Racing in Formula 2 and sits in sixth place of the Drivers’ Championship on 79 points, having achieved two race victories and one pole position so far.

    Prior to this, the young driver finished fourth during his sole F3 season in 2024 after climbing the ranks in junior categories, a rise that saw him win the Macau F4 World Cup race at the end of 2023.

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  • Wahab Riaz likely to receive NOC to play in World Championship of Legends

    Wahab Riaz likely to receive NOC to play in World Championship of Legends

    LAHORE – Former Pakistan pacer and current Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) official Wahab Riaz is set to make a return to the field as he eyes participation in the upcoming World Championship of Legends.

    The tournament, scheduled to be held in England later this month, is expected to feature several former cricket stars.

    Wahab, who has been associated with the PCB in various roles, has been included in the Pakistan Champions squad for the event. This marks a shift from earlier this year when he was denied permission to serve as the bowling coach for Quetta Gladiators in Pakistan Super League (PSL) season 10. However, sources say that the PCB is likely to issue him a No Objection Certificate (NOC) for the upcoming tournament.

    Wahab Riaz, who retired from international cricket five years ago, has expressed his interest in coaching Pakistan Shaheens in the future. He has already been seen guiding bowlers in recent skills camps organized by the PCB.

    The Pakistan Champions squad also includes former captain Sarfaraz Ahmed. Other confirmed players for the event include Shahid Afridi, Shoaib Malik, Sharjeel Khan, Asif Ali, Kamran Akmal, Aamer Yamin, Sohail Khan, and Sohail Tanvir. The team is owned by Kamil Khan, who is the brother-in-law of former head coach Waqar Younis.

    Wahab had previously served as the head of the PCB’s Champions Cup mentorship project, which involved five mentors: Misbah-ul-Haq, Sarfaraz Ahmed, Saqlain Mushtaq, Shoaib Malik and Waqar Younis. While Shoaib Malik has since stepped down, the others have continued despite indications from the board suggesting resignation.

    Sources said that since these mentors were receiving salaries of Rs5 million per month, the board would be required to pay three months’ salary if they are removed from their roles.

    Regarding former cricketers’ participation in leagues, the PCB clarified that, like active players, ex-players are allowed to participate in up to two leagues per year.

    However, during this period, they do not receive salaries from the board.

    Pakistan Champions lost the final to India in the previous edition of the World Championship of Legends. That squad was led by Younis Khan.

    However, the participation of Younis and Misbah in the upcoming tournament remains uncertain.

    Management, stakeholders review PSL X statistics

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