Karachi, Jan 1: The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has hired the services of
former England captain Geoffrey Boycott at a hair-raising £2,000(Rs 180,000) per
day contract.
Boycott's assignment to coach the teenage budding youngsters at Lahore's
National Cricket Academy will start from Feb 5, highly placed sources said.
For his 15-day stay in Lahore, Boycott, who was found guiltyby a French court
for assaulting his girlfriend, will be paid £30,000(Rs 2.70 million).
Additionally, the PCB will give business class travel facilities to Boycott
besides accommodation in a five-star hotel. The additional expenses are expected
to cost the PCB Rs 250,000.
The sources said the terms and conditions of the contract were discussed and
finalized when Boycott was reporting the recently concluded England-Pakistan
series for a British Radio channel.
According to information, Boycott had initially demanded £3,000 per day. But he
finally agreed on £2,000 after Ramiz Raja, Boycott's fellow commentator and
member of the PCB advisory council, negotiated on behalf of the PCB.
Boycott is one of the few foreigners the PCB is contemplating to hire to run its
cricket academy. Former South African offspinner Pat Symcox is also said to be
in negotiating stages with the board.
"If Symcox agrees, he will be awarded a handsome contract though the amount may
not be as high as that of Boycott," sources said.
A South African curator is also said to be in contact with the PCB to prepare
pitches countrywide. Only last year, the PCB engaged Tony Greig at a reported
amount of $10,000 for unknown services.
Boycott has always been in the reckoning of the present cricket setup with some
of the officials having pushed his case to replace Intikhab Alam as coach last
year. Intikhab was eventually replaced by Javed Miandad who now has been given
the mandate until the World Cup in 2003.
Ironically, when Intikhab was released of his two-month contract, he was paid
$10,000 - a far lesser amount as compared to Boycott considering the time the
former Pakistan captain spent with the team and at a time when the cricket
administration was in complete chaos with rapid changes at the top.
Boycott's expected contract is also intriguing in the background that only a
couple of years back, the PCB had breached its promise with Mushtaq Mohammad and
refused to increase his monthly stipend as team coach. Mushtaq was being paid a
paltry $1,000 per month.
Boycott's appointment also lacks logic and wisdom because he would be coaching
youngsters for whom English language and that too with a Yorkshire ascent would
be hard to understand.
In addition to this, Boycott's coaching experience is virtually nil. So much so,
he has never been employed as a coach by his own county (Yorkshire) for whom he
played for nearly two decades, what to talk about coaching any another county or
country.
The other interesting point to be emphasised is what magical tips Boycott would
pass on to the youngsters in 15 days which Pakistan's own stalwarts like Hanif
Mohammad, Zaheer Abbas, Abdul Qadir, Javed Miandad, Mushtaq Mohammad, Wasim
Raja, Sarfaraz Nawaz etc cannot convey.
The investment on Boycott is nothing but throwing precious foreign exchange into
deep well which can be better utilized. The least the PCB can do with Rs 2.70
million is to engage their own former Test cricketers to assist the
youngsters.(£1 = Rs 90)