Imran (right) and cricketer Shahid Afridi look on during the launch ceremony of a cricket talent search in Peshawar last week. The legendary cricketer today said he believes the game is heading backwards. AFPpic
Imran (right) look on during the launch ceremony of a cricket talent search in Peshawar last week. The legendary cricketer today said he believes the game is heading backwards. AFPpic

PAKISTAN legend Imran Khan slammed controversial plans to reform cricket’s governing body today, saying they would take the game back to the days of colonialism.

Moves to restructure the International Cricket Council (ICC) to hand power to India, Australia and England, the game’s financial powerhouses, were passed in principle during a board meeting on Tuesday.

“If I was the PCB (Pakistan Cricket Board) head I would have strongly objected the new colonial system,” Khan told AFP.

“I think the answer is to make the ICC more productive for the betterment of cricket.”

He said Tuesday’s meeting at ICC headquarters in Dubai reminded him of one he attended in 1993.

“Then India and Pakistan were on the same page and they fought to end the imperialism in the ICC and wanted it to be run in a democratic way,” Khan said.

“It became democratic until India, because of its big money influence and supported by Australia and England, made it back to square one.”

Khan, who played 88 Tests and 175 one-day internationals for Pakistan, said the game was in “genuine crisis”.

“There is a lack of quality in players, if you talk of spinners or fast bowlers or batsmen, and unless a correct mix is not found cricket will suffer,” he said.

“The revenue is coming but money should not be decisive and that’s why the quality is suffering, which is disastrous.”

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