India-Pakistan Test series likely in 2015

Pakistan's conditional support for the ICC revamp hinges on the promise of six series against India, including a 'home' series in the Middle East as part of an upcoming, reworked eight-year FTP cycle from 2015 to 2023, ESPNcricinfo has learnt.

The change in the PCB's stance has taken place on the condition that Pakistan would be involved in bilateral series against all Full Members, including India. If Indo-Pak series are officially slotted into the eight-year FTP, it could also involve a 'home' series for Pakistan against India in the United Arab Emirates.

The PCB is now waiting for a final confirmation from the BCCI following its Working Committee meeting, which the PCB have been informed, is expected to take place in the next 15 days. It will then enable the PCB to work out a long-term broadcasting deal with regular India series at its centre.

The PCB's opposition to the ICC's original position paper that recommended a remodeling of the ICC's administrative structure and its revenue distribution rested on the argument that it was against the principle of "equality." However, following certain changes in the resolutions, as well as the possibility of playing India frequently led PCB to support the governance, finance and FTP changes in the ICC, which was driven entirely by the BCCI, ECB and Cricket Australia.

ESPNcricinfo understands that all the nine member boards have confirmed their earlier commitments with PCB until 2020 and are chalking out a fresh plan for the period from 2020 to 2023.

The BCCI could look to slot in as many as six series against Pakistan, due to the gaps that are available in the existing FTP calendar. The first of these bilateral series could take place in the UAE in the winter of 2015. "Cricket between both countries is beneficial as the Pakistan government is also keen to revive ties with India on a high note," PCB chairman Najam Sethi said on Friday following the two-day ICC board meeting in Dubai.

India and Pakistan have not played a full series since the 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai, which India blamed on militants based across the border. However, Pakistan visited India for a short limited-over series in December 2012, but despite not getting any revenue out of the series, it was regarded as a stepping stone in reviving cricketing ties between both countries.

Since July 2013, Pakistan have been without a long-term broadcasting deal, one of the major sources of income for the PCB. The PCB already had to deal with a long-standing budget-deficit, which in August 2013, was calculated at nearly PKR 500 million. The PCB estimates that after committing to the ICC revamp, the financial benefits could reach PKR 30 billion from the bilateral ties, the major chunk of which will be earned from hosting India.


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Lyth gets that Taunton feeling

Yorkshire 342 for 5 (Rashid 85*, Lyth 85, Ballance 77) v Somerset
Scorecard

A batsman seeking form and international recognition relishes coming to Taunton. That was always the case in the fondly remembered days when Phil Frost cut pitches for avaricious run-gatherers and not much has changed in this era of relaid surfaces.

So it was that Adam Lyth, who often scores heavily here, scored 85, Adil Rashid one run fewer with the prospect of a hundred on the morrow, and Gary Ballance, seeking the attention of England's selectors as he looks to retain his place post-Australia, 77 with a measure of conviction.

In 11 innings at the County Ground, Lyth has made 646 first-class runs at an average of 64.06. In one match in 2010 alone, he struck 142 and 93, and there was a further century last year. Nothing seemed more certain than that he would reach a third century in his visits here: he saw off the new ball after Yorkshire had been put in, swiftly making 69 for the first wicket with Alex Lees, and collected runs all around the wicket against seam - no shortage - and spin, represented here by Johann Myburgh, when George Dockrell might well have been a better bet.

It was to his opening attack that Marcus Trescothick looked upon making the contentious decision to ask Yorkshire to bat. There was a little grass left on the pitch, but then that is often so here. In choosing to omit Jamie Overton, who has, admittedly, been troubled by tendonitis, the captain was asking two change bowlers, Alfonso Thomas and Lewis Gregory, to make the initial breakthrough.

As it transpired, Craig Overton, preferred to his twin, and Craig Meschede, who really were the change bowlers, could well have been given first bowl.

Meschede uprooted Lees' off stump with a yorker that the batsman appeared to see late and promptly had Kane Williamson caught at short mid off for a duck, the drive unconvincing. Andrew Gale became a third victim, leg before for 24. All the while, Lyth prospered. He spoke a year ago of hoping to play for England, but the reality is that too many of his colleagues have the same aspirations, and indeed have achieved them already.

When he was out, having earlier been dropped by Craig Kieswetter on 70, and having struck 14 fours in a stay of 160 balls, it was an unfortunate dismissal. His swivel pull was properly middled and the catch, by Gregory at midwicket off Overton, was a terrific one - right handed and stooping to his right in anticipation.

Ballance , meanwhile, had taken 25 balls to get off the mark. Not that this affected his cover driving: one superlative front foot shot through the covers off Meschede was the shot of the day. Now partnered by Rashid, he progressed inexorably towards a century, only to be beaten when Gregory took the new ball. He had struck ten fours and his partnership with Rashid realised 115 off 32 overs.

Rashid is tipped by Dickie Bird, who was on the ground in his presidential year with Yorkshire, to play for England before Bird's term of office ends. We shall hold him to that forecast - made, it should be noted, before this innings was underway.

All wristiness in his flicks and square drives, Rashid was 15 short of his century at the close of a bright day. Would Yorkshire have batted had they won the toss? "We were happy to do so," said Jason Gillespie, their coach, doubtless not wishing to sound critical of Trescothick, his old opponent from their Ashes days.


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Jordan's excellence sets up Joyce

Sussex 229 (Joyce 117, Barker 3-52) lead Warwickshire 87 (Trott 37, Magoffin 3-15, Jordan 3-15, Lewis 3-18) by 142 runs
Scorecard

The national selector, James Whitaker, might have ventured to Edgbaston to see the batting of Jonathan Trott and Ian Bell, but it was Ed Joyce who stood out amid the wreckage of a day on which 20 wickets fell.

At a time when Associate nations have been given a pathway, albeit a pathway strewn with obstacles, along the route to Test cricket, Joyce provided a compelling reminder of the class of batsmen outside the current elite. In seam-friendly conditions in which everyone else struggled, he oozed quality, compiling a century from 116 balls. Only two other men passed 30 and no-one else on either side managed to reach 40.

Joyce's enterprise left Sussex with a potentially decisive first-innings lead of 142 as they immediately threatened to add to an innings victory in their opening Championship match of the season against Middlesex at Hove.

This was Joyce's second first-class century of the season - following an innings of 103 against Loughborough MCCU - and his 14th since joining Sussex at the start of 2009. It was chanceless until he reached 100 - Trott then put down a relatively straightforward chance on the midwicket boundary - and was studded with fluent drives through the covers and graceful flicks off the pads. There are few higher-quality, more elegant batsmen in the county game.

While Joyce may take the headlines, Sussex's dominant position was established by their seamers. Utilising helpful conditions expertly, a quartet of bowlers that have all been deemed surplus to requirements by Surrey at one stage or another dismissed Warwickshire for their lowest first-class total this century.

Indeed, it was only the third time this century they have been dismissed for under 100 and is their lowest total since their 86 against Essex in 1999. It was also their lowest total against Sussex since they were dismissed for 43 here in 1982.

Chris Jordan, in particular, can only have impressed Whitaker. Bowling at a sharp pace, finding movement both ways and maintaining an excellent line and length, he cut through the top-order with a series of deliveries that were close to unplayable. Certainly Laurie Evans could have done little with the ball that bounced and left him, while Varun Chopra and Bell were also victims of fast, well-directed deliveries that drew strokes and moved late to take the edge.

Odd though it sounds for a team that lost all 10 of its wickets before lunch, Warwickshire were victims more of excellent bowling and slip catching - six wickets fell to catches in the cordon - than they were guilty of poor batting.

It was a scenario that caused Bell to rue his decision to bat first upon winning the toss. He later admitted he had "got that one wrong," but, after lunch, as conditions eased, it was easy to see why he had batted first. In truth, it was an excellent toss to lose and Joyce admitted that he, while he would have chosen to bowl, he was in two minds about what to do.

The ECB's pitch liaison officer, Jack Birkenshaw, left after tea having declared himself satisfied with the pitch. There was some seam movement, as you would expect on April 13, but much of the damage was done by swing. That has nothing to do with the pitch.

Jordan received excellent support from Steve Magoffin, who created indecision in the batsmen's minds by moving the ball both ways, and Jon Lewis, who would rarely have seen conditions as much to his liking as this in his spell at The Oval. Jimmy Anyon, back at one of his previous clubs, also claimed the 300th first-class wicket of his career when Chris Woakes attempted to turn a straight one into the leg side.

"Jordan would bring something new to the England team," Joyce said afterwards. "He bowls with pace, he swings the ball, he is a good first slip and he bats well. He was exceptional today."

The one man who looked comfortable was Trott. Given a rousing reception by the 1,500 spectators enjoying the Spring sunshine, Trott played the moving ball expertly and looked every inch a Test-class batsman. It was some surprise when, left with the tail for company, he attempted to force the pace and, in trying to run one to third man, chopped a ball on to his stumps.

"They bowled outstandingly well," Bell agreed later. "There actually weren't that many bad shots. You saw some genuine dismissals and Jordan, especially, was brilliant. He bowled exactly where we didn't want it. We're a long way behind in this game and we have to come out scrapping tomorrow."

Perhaps the day could have been even better for Sussex. By the time they began their reply, conditions had eased considerably and they had an opportunity to bat Warwickshire out of the game. Starting brightly against some loose bowling from Chris Wright and Keith Barker, they were brought to heel by the excellent Woakes and canny Jeetan Patel and may yet come to regret some profligate batting. Joyce apart, they batted poorly.

A first innings lead of 142 is substantial, certainly, but with several batsmen falling to loose strokes - Joyce pulled directly to the midwicket fence where Trott made amends for his earlier error; Rory Hamilton-Brown heaved across the line; Luke Wells turned one to mid-wicket and Ben Brown edged a waft - they may yet reflect that they have missed a chance to kill off a dangerous adversary.

Sussex have a poor record at Edgbaston. They have only won once in the Championship here since 1961 and that was back in 1982.

"We're a little frustrated," Joyce continued. "We would have liked to be five or six down. But Woakes came back at us really well and Warwickshire probably have the strongest seam unit in the country. We expect an attritional day tomorrow."

The other shadow on Sussex's day was the continuing struggles of Matt Prior with an Achilles injury. Prior has struggled with Achilles problems for a couple of years and, having not been fit to keep wicket in Sussex's first game against Middlesex, was obliged to pull out of this game entirely.

Sussex hope that an injection and a two-week period of rest will resolve the issue but, with England looking to rebuild with a team that can see them through the next few years, there have to be doubts over Prior's long-term fitness. At present, Sussex hope to have him back for their game against Somerset, though it may be he is able only to bat and not keep wicket.


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Kervezee keeps Worcs afloat

Kent 39 for 2 trail Worcestershire 224 (Kervezee 54, Joseph 3-43) by 185 runs
Scorecard

New Road saw 12 wickets fall on day one as Worcestershire were dismissed cheaply in their Championship Division Two match against Kent. The fact that the game was able to be held at all was a credit to Worcestershire, seven weeks after the ground was under 10 feet of water.

Worcestershire began their season with a rain-affected draw against Hampshire and were bowled out for just 224 in their home opener, with Alexei Kervezee the only man to get past 50. But they dismissed Kent openers Sam Northeast and Rob Key after tea to leave the visitors on 39 for two in reply at the close of play.

Worcestershire won the toss and elected to bat but lost Matthew Pardoe for a duck as he was bowled lbw by Doug Bollinger, Kent's overseas signing. That brought Moeen Ali to the crease and he rattled off 41 in just 37 balls, including a six off England team-mate James Tredwell that led to a replacement ball being needed.

Moeen was then bowled by Darren Stevens and Tom Kohler-Cadmore followed just two balls later lbw for a duck.

Kervezee put on 92 for the fourth wicket with Daryl Mitchell before he was caught by Tredwell off the bowling of Robbie Joseph and Mitchell followed soon after. The skipper nicked to wicketkeeper Sam Billings off Joseph to exit for 47, a continuation of the good form that saw him register 172 not out at Southampton last week.

Ben Cox was next to go for a four-ball duck and Ross Whiteley (12) followed, bowled by Bollinger, but not before he had hit Tredwell for a second six. This time, the ball was found. Shaaiq Choudhry, Gareth Andrew and Jack Shantry all made useful contributions but Worcestershire will have wanted to make more on a glorious day.

Kent made a solid start and were 31 without loss when Shantry trapped Key in front for 11. Choudhry soon rapped Northeast on the pads to send him back for 18 but Daniel Bell-Drummond and Brendan Nash saw the visitors through to stumps.


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Rohit looks forward to Hussey masterclass

Rohit Sharma has said he hopes to pick up the skills of consistent cricket from Michael Hussey, who will be joining Mumbai Indians for IPL 2014. Hussey was not retained by his previous franchise, Chennai Super Kings, and was bought by the defending IPL champions for Rs 5 crores ($833,000 approx) in the auction in February.

Hussey's inclusion is expected to strengthen Mumbai's top order that is missing Ricky Ponting, Sachin Tendulkar and Dwayne Smith from last season. The bowling is also missing Mitchell Johnson, who was one of the leading wicket-takers in their title win, but Rohit said that the presence of Zaheer Khan was a boost.

"Except Mitchell Johnson and Dwayne Smith, we have pretty much the same side," he told the Indian Express. "We wanted to buy Johnson and used the joker card too but sadly it couldn't happen. However, the core players still remain the same; plus, we have Michael Hussey and Zaheer Khan, who bring a lot of experience. So picking the right combination will be important for us. On a personal note, I'm looking forward to learn from Hussey how he manages to be so consistent."

Rohit, who took over as captain from Ricky Ponting midway last season, said the leadership role had given him confidence that he carried forward into international cricket. He also stressed that the biggest test for most teams this season would not be the new conditions in UAE, but finding a team spirit right away due to the formation of new squads.

"More than the playing conditions, what will be the key for most of the teams is how quickly every player gels with the other," he said. "After the auction, the teams have many new members and it will be a challenge for them to perform as a group. If the atmosphere in the dressing room is friendly and positive, then it is reflected on the field. Right combinations will be the key to success. These will be challenging two months ahead."


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Baroda in final despite loss, Goa fall just short

Group A


Prashant Gupta's unbeaten maiden T20 hundred helped Uttar Pradesh chase down a 179-run target against Haryana, boosting their run rate and, eventually it turned out, putting them in the final against Baroda on Monday.*

Prashant slammed 102 off 58 balls striking five fours and seven sixes as he guided the run chase with steady partnerships. He had good support from Eklavya Dwivedi and Akshdeep Nath as UP achieved the target with four balls to spare.

Earlier, Haryana were reduced to 119 for 5 in the 14th over after their openers Avi Barot and Rahul Dewan had added 63. Late cameos from Rahul Dalal (24 from 19 balls) and Lokesh Sharma (16 off 10 balls), however, lifted the side to a competitive 178 for 8.

Both Goa - one of the most dominant teams in this tournament - and Gujarat needed to win big to topple UP at the top of the points table, and seal their place in the final. Both teams fell short, Goa heartbreakingly so. Gujarat needed to win by roughly 30 runs, defending 180. Goa needed to chase it down before the completion of the 15th over. Gujarat didn't get close, Goa fell short by roughly two balls. Needing a boundary off 14.4 to lift their net run rate over UP's, the set Harshad Gadekar was out caught. The following delivery, the other set batsman, Rohit Asnodkar was bowled by left-arm seamer Kamlesh Thakor. Goa finished the game with a four one ball later, but it was not enough - again it was so close yet so far for them; had they managed a six off this final delivery, their net run rate would still have been marginally better than UP's.

That they were able to get so close was once again down to a solid platform set at the top - opener Swapnil Asnodkar slammed 64 off 28 deliveries.

If Gujarat were in with a good chance of their own, that was also because of the solid beginning their top order game them. Priyank Panchal and Rajdeep Darbar added 86 in nine overs, before No. 3 Smit Patel hit 50 not out of 31 to take them to a very competitive 180.

Group B


Baroda qualified for the final of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy despite yielding their three-match winning streak in the Super League. Kerela were joined with them on 12 points with the victory, but were 0.114 points shy in the run-rate battle. The fact that it got that close was because of an unmitigated assault from Raiphi Gomez. He razed 42 off 19 balls, with three fours and three sixes to imbue momentum to a meandering Kerala innings. Jafar Jamal held the other end during a stand of 55 runs in 30 balls as a scoreline of 81 for 5 in 14.1 was transformed to 152 for 6 in 20 overs.

Aditya Waghmode kept Baroda in the hunt with a well-paced half-century. But the middle overs proved disastrous as KJ Rakesh and Rohan Prem orchestrated a collapse - five wickets for 18 runs. Waghmode was the first domino who fell after scoring 50 off 32 balls. The tail realised the futility of an equation that demanded 48 off 13 balls and ushered Baroda through to the 20 overs to salvage vital run-rate points.

A fifty from Kshitiz Sharma and seven wickets shared between Javed Khan and Yogesh Nagar helped Delhi beat Rajasthan by seven runs.

Kshitiz's 57 off 42 balls had four fours and four sixes and helped lift Delhi from 36 for 3 to 121 before Sumit Narwal smacked a quick 17 off seven balls to take the score to 144 for 4.

In reply, Arjit Gupta looked set to steer Rajasthan to victory, smacking a 36-ball 72 with five fours and six sixes. His dismissal in the 13th over, however, created instability within the ranks and two overs later, Ankit Lamba's dismissal triggered a slide that saw Rajasthan lose their last seven wickets for 21 runs to fold for 137. Javed and Nagar were the architects of the collapse and finished with 4 for 18 and 3 for 13 respectively.

12.45GMT, April 12: The round-up has been updated, after the completion of the Goa-Gujarat game.


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Butt asks PCB to work on his rehab too

Salman Butt, the banned former Pakistan captain, is hopeful PCB chairman Najam Sethi will "do for other players" what he is doing for Mohammad Amir, who is also serving a ban for spot-fixing.

Sethi had stated on several occasions previously that he is looking into getting the terms of Amir's five-year ban reduced by the ICC, so that he can revive his international career at the earliest. The ICC is set to implement an amended anti-corruption code from June, which might facilitate a quicker return to cricket for players serving long-term bans.

"I wish what he [Sethi] is doing for Amir, he does for other players too," Butt said on Saturday. "Pakistan needs Amir, and the other players."

In September last year, the PCB had sought advice from the Queen's Counsel in England, with regards to getting Amir's ban reduced. While under the old corruption code there is no provision for the ICC to reduce a ban, it is understood that the PCB was then looking to ensure Amir could at least use its training facilities ahead of schedule so he can be ready to make a comeback as soon his ban ends.

Butt said he had met the PCB several times to see what it could do for him in terms of rehabilitation, but was yet to receive any positive response. "I have been to the cricket board at least 10-15 times, and have met Colonel Azam of anti-corruption, and have asked him to start my rehabilitation lectures. It has to be organised by the PCB.

"I am available 24-7. I come to the ground every day, and as long as I am fit I am ready to play. Whatever things ICC judges have told me about rehabilitation, it's completed from my end. Whatever now PCB says I am ready."

Butt said he just wanted to be treated the same way as Amir. "It's good that the chairman is making efforts to revive the international career of Mohammad Amir, but he should also do it for others. When the ban is up, everyone should get an equal opportunity. I am not demanding anything extra."

In February 2011, Amir, 21, was one of the three banned by the ICC, along with Butt (29) and Mohammad Asif (31), after being found guilty of spot-fixing during Pakistan's Lord's Test against England in August 2010. Amir was the only one to plead guilty to the charges in the trial that followed at London's Southwark Crown Court.


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Shahzaib five-for gives Karachi University title

Karachi University 74 for 0 (Ammar 37*, Haris 26*) beat University of Sargodha 70 (Raza 28, Shahzaib 5-6) by 10 wickets
Scorecard

A five-wicket haul from the legspinner Shahzaib Khan helped Karachi University power to a 10-wicket win in the final of the Red Bull Campus Cricket National Finals, Pakistan, against University of Sargodha at the Moin Khan Cricket Academy. University of Sargodha, put in to bat, were never really in the game and their progress was hampered by the loss of wickets right from the off.

Umer Raza (28) and Mohammed Nadeem (16) were the only two batsmen who managed to string together a meaningful stand- 43 for the third wicket- as none of the other players could reach double digits. Shahzaib eventually finished with 5 for 6 in 3.5 overs to bundle University of Sargodha out for 70 in 14.5 overs. Mir Hamza, Junaid Ilyas and Mirza Jamil snared a scalp each.

University of Sargodha used six different bowlers to try and restrict their opponents, but Karachi University were hardly troubled chasing a paltry total, as Haris Ali (26 not out) and Ammar Hasan (37 not out) helped the team saunter home in 10 overs.


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India A to tour Australia in July

India A will play two four-day games against Australia A and a limited-overs quadrangular series on its tour to Australia which begins on July 6, the BCCI has said. The quadrangular series will also feature South Africa A and Cricket Australia's National Performance Squad.

The India A side will begin their tour with the four-day games in Queensland, scheduled to start on July 6 and July 13 respectively. The team will then play two round-robin stages in the quadrangular, scheduled to start on July 20, before the final on August 2.

"This tour is a part of the exchange programme that has been initiated by BCCI along with Cricket Australia and Cricket South Africa to provide increased exposure to our upcoming players and an opportunity to familiarise and compete in overseas conditions," Sanjay Patel, the BCCI secretary said.

The tour will be the first major series for India A in 2014. In 2013, the team had toured South Africa in August and, apart from the four-day games, also participated in a tri-series between South Africa A and Australia A. The side that participated in the A tour, which took place soon after India's tour to Zimbabwe, included Shikhar Dhawan, Cheteshwar Pujara, Suresh Raina and Rohit Sharma, among others. India A then hosted New Zealand A and West Indies A for first-class and limited-overs matches in September.


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PCB agrees conditionally to ICC revamp

The PCB has agreed to the proposed ICC revamp on the condition that it will be a part of bilateral series against all Full Members, including India, over the next eight years. The PCB's chairman justified his move, reasoning that Pakistan can't afford to be isolated from the rest of cricketing world, most of which had agreed to the wide-ranging changes suggested.

The PCB, according to its chairman, will gain estimated Rs 30 billion (around $310m) in next eight years from the bilateral agreements.

"Decision was made after sensing an isolation," Sethi told a media conference at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. "If we don't play big teams we could be bankrupt in the next two years so we have to stay in line and play our home series with India. Because our infrastructure is mainly run with the money generated playing international cricket, it's very important to play India because it generate major chunk of money. We have to run our cricket and we can't sit out being isolated. Hence we had to go with them but we signed with all legal binding documents and the details of all fixtures will be released soon."

Sethi has also revealed that the world governing board have asked PCB to nominate a candidate from Pakistan for the ceremonial role of ICC president next year.

The PCB is the last Full Member to have extended its support to the governance, finance and FTP changes in the ICC, which were proposed by the BCCI, the ECB and Cricket Australia in February. When the changes, which increase the power of those three boards within the ICC, were first proposed, four Full Members had come out against them: the PCB, the Bangladesh Cricket Board, Cricket South Africa (CSA) and Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC). The proposals have since been revised and were approved by eight of the Full Members on February 8. SLC and the PCB were the only two to refrain from voting at that meeting, and SLC extended its support to the revamp 10 days later.

The PCB had been opposing the position paper right from the start, citing that the revamp is against the principle of "equality" and had been objecting the proposal as whole. "Since January we understand that various factors have been toned down but we lost the ground and our position was weak enough to crumble but PCB stood hard and we managed to get more than enough. I am happy that we are back in business otherwise nobody was ready to talk to Pakistan and they were chalking their own bilateral tour with the exception of Pakistan cricket."

Since July 2013, Pakistan have been without a long-term broadcasting deal, one of the major sources of income for the PCB. With no series scheduled against India until 2020, there could be testing times for the board ahead which is already dealing with a long-standing budget-deficit. In August 2013, the deficit was nearly 500 million Pakistani rupees.

"Now PCB is in a position to go with a long-term deal next year and we have estimated an amount of Rs. 30 billions with our home series after every board have assured a slot in next eight-year cycle. Apart from the broadcasting rights we will be getting a share of ICC tournament, which has been increased from 0.3 to 1.3 per cent. So at the end of the day we have good news for our cricket."


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