Pakistan will consider the toll county cricket takes on its players before
deciding on whether or not to allow their bowlers, in particular, to take
up future contracts.
Pakistan's fast bowlers have been plagued by injury in recent years,
preventing the selection of what would be a first-choice attack. Not all
of the injuries have come from playing county cricket, but the board
worries that an excessive workload could adversely affect their resources.
In recent years, Mohammad Asif, Shoaib Akhtar, Mohammad Sami, Rana
Naved-ul-Hasan and Yasir Arafat have turned out for various counties.
"We have to look at the effects of county cricket on our players'
fitness," Nasim Ashraf, chairman of the PCB, told reporters at the National
Stadium in Karachi. "Even some spinners have come back from their seasons
completely fatigued and that is not good for Pakistan."
Danish Kaneria is the only active Pakistan spinner currently with a county
contract and he has one season left with Essex on his current deal. Since
coming back from the last season, Kaneria has struggled for impact in two
Test series against South Africa and India. He bowled nearly 561 overs in
the County Championship alone, in 13 matches.
The Pakistan board prevented Umar Gul and Mohammad Asif from taking up
county contracts in 2007, though it later compensated both financially for
the loss of earnings. It has also prevented Rao Iftikhar Anjum from taking
up a contract for 2008. Ashraf did not say, however, whether players - if
prevented - would be compensated in the future.
"In the past Pakistan players used to play county cricket because the
financial rewards at home were not so high. That is not needed now because
we are in a position to pay our players handsomely and they don't need to
look abroad," said Ashraf.
A final decision on the matter will be taken when the board's governing
committee meets in Karachi on January 25.