Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026 As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future Every frame at a cost: The safety crisis facing Pakistan's camerapersons Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism Zee secures FIFA World Cup rights in India through 2030 How fact-checkers verify viral videos during breaking news Pentagon restrictions on reporters draw media backlash Israel-Lebanon talks proceed as conflict hinders reporting Why governments are tightening controls on foreign journalists China condemns US restrictions on Xinhua reporter Taiwan condemns China over New York Times reporter expulsion The biggest threats facing journalism in Asia today Press freedom review: The many faces of pressure on the press Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026 As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future Every frame at a cost: The safety crisis facing Pakistan's camerapersons Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism Zee secures FIFA World Cup rights in India through 2030 How fact-checkers verify viral videos during breaking news Pentagon restrictions on reporters draw media backlash Israel-Lebanon talks proceed as conflict hinders reporting Why governments are tightening controls on foreign journalists China condemns US restrictions on Xinhua reporter Taiwan condemns China over New York Times reporter expulsion The biggest threats facing journalism in Asia today Press freedom review: The many faces of pressure on the press
Logo
Janu
Track Global Media Layoffs

PCB suspends Saeed Ajmal's contract for media outburst

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published: 12 November 2015

Join our WhatsApp channel

PCB suspends Saeed Ajmal's contract for media outburst
Saeed Ajmal's contract with PCB has been suspended due to his media remarks on illegal bowling actions. Ajmal criticized the ICC for biased enforcement against spinners.

KARACHI: Pakistan Cricket Board suspended former spinner Saeed Ajmal's contract over television comments he made about the way bowlers with illegal action are dealt with. The 38-year-old had been Pakistan's match-winner in the last five years until he was sidelined over his bowling action before being cleared in February. Ajmal, who returned to international cricket in April after remodelling his action, claimed that Harbhajan Singh and Ravichandran Ashwin were chuckers, but never punished because "they belong to India."

Ajmal had also blasted the International Cricket Council's (ICC) process on the illegal action issue, claiming it singled out spinners like him.

"Why just target the off-spinners?" Ajmal questioned on two channels last week. "Why not the left-arm spinners, leg-spinners or fast bowlers?

"I can tell you that I have been through this bowling assessment process so many times and have watched and studied this issue so closely that I can vouch that if tests were carried out, there would be many other bowlers whose bowling actions would exceed the 15 degrees extension limit," said Ajmal, singling out Indian spinner Harbhajan Singh as a suspect.

Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Shaharyar Khan told reporters Ajmal's contract had been suspended. "We feel sorry over his comments," Khan said. "We have taken the minimum action on the violation of discipline and have suspended his contract, stopped releasing his salary and have asked him to explain his comments."

Despite not being selected since April this year, Ajmal was retained in the "B" category in PCB central contracts.

Khan said Ajmal had been supported in his efforts to alter his bowling action.

"We supported him a lot, invited Saqlain (Mushtaq) to correct his action so his comments were sad that we did not support him," said Khan.

Ajmal had a formidable record of picking up 178 wickets from 35 Tests and 184 wickets from 113 ODI games, before his action was reported in August last year as suspect.

He was subsequently suspended a month later as his elbow was extending more than the 15 degrees tolerance limit allowed under the ICC rules.

Ajmal remodelled his action under former Pakistan spinner Saqlain Mushtaq but managed just one wicket in the two one-day internationals and was wicketless in a - both against Bangladesh in April. - AFP

Key Points

  • Ajmal's contract was suspended for critical comments about bowler actions.
  • He accused Indian bowlers like Harbhajan Singh of being favored despite illegal actions.
  • PCB Chairman Shaharyar Khan expressed disappointment over Ajmal's remarks.
  • Ajmal was a key player for Pakistan, taking 178 wickets in Tests and 184 in ODIs.
  • He remodeled his bowling action after being deemed illegal last year.

Ask AI: Understand this story your way

AI Enabled

Dig deeper, ask anything — get instant context, background, and clarity.

Not sure what to choose? Try one of these.

The AI generates results based on your selected options
Your AI-generated results will appear here after you click the button.

Disclaimer: This feature is powered by AI and is intended to help readers explore and understand news stories more easily. While we strive for accuracy, AI-generated responses may occasionally be incomplete or reflect limitations in the underlying model. This feature does not represent the editorial views of JournalismPakistan. For our full, verified reporting, please refer to the original article.

Don't Miss These

Newsroom
Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership

Amar Guriro: Journalism's future is human-AI partnership

 June 05, 2026 Amar Guriro, founder of Pakistan's first AI-powered news platform, says journalism's future rests on human-AI collaboration to improve reporting while preserving editorial oversight.


The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026

The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 23 | June 5, 2026

 June 05, 2026 Global Media Brief reviews pressures reshaping journalism, press freedom, AI and platform power, and reports BBC's Emmy, 60 Minutes turmoil and Taiwan's protest.


As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future

As AI reshapes news, publishers seek a sustainable future

 June 05, 2026 At the World News Media Congress in Marseille, publishers discussed how generative AI is altering newsroom workflows, audience engagement and content licensing.


Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones

Why journalists are increasingly targeted in conflict zones

 June 04, 2026 Journalists in conflict zones face rising danger as combatants, states and militias increasingly target independent reporting to control narratives.


What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism

What the 60 Minutes controversy means for TV journalism

 June 03, 2026 The 60 Minutes controversy at CBS exposes tensions over leadership, editorial independence and pressures on legacy TV journalism amid political polarization.


Popular Stories