PCB, BCCI set for face-off over Emerging Nations Cup

Press Trust of India  |  Karachi 

is likely to adopt a strong stance at the Council meeting in this week and will insist on hosting the Asian Emerging Nations Cup tournament this year.

According to a senior of the Board, will make it clear at the meeting that if can't come to to play in the Emerging Nations Cup than will also not be able to send its team for the Cup in September in

The PCB will try to convince the member boards to move the Cup out of to a third country like or even so that can participate in it, the said.

PCB Chairman, Najam Sethi, and chief operating officer, are due to fly out today for where Sethi will the meeting as ACC

Another source said that Sethi had decided to adopt a strong stance with which will be represented at the meeting on Monday and Tuesday.

PCB is not happy over India's attempts to move the Asian Emerging Nations Cup out of on security grounds. It will adopt a tit for tat policy by insisting it can't send its team to for the Cup in the current scenario, the source confirmed.

The ACC meeting will finalise dates for the two tournaments and the under-19 Cup to be held this year.

had got hosting rights for the Asian Emerging Nations Cup when an ACC meeting was held in last October but delegates from and didn't come for the meeting.

Later and both said they will not send their teams to for the Emerging Nations Cup due to security concerns.

But now after successfully hosting the two PSL playoffs in and the final in and then the bilateral T20 series against the West Indies, the PCB believes that and have no grounds to resist having the Asian Emerging Nations Cup in Lahore, the source said.

Relations between and are at their lowest ebb and the Indian board has steadfastly refused to entertain any full bilateral series with since 2008.

Sethi has said he will be holding discussions with other boards at the ICC meeting in Kolkata from April 22 to convince them to send their teams to for bilateral series.

The and Indian boards are also locked in a compensation case before the ICC disputes resolution committee with the PCB demanding that the BCCI pays them a compensation of around $70 million for rejecting an MOU signed between the two boards in 2014 under which and were to play six bilateral series between 2015 and 2023.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, April 08 2018. 15:35 IST