Pakistan’s opening batsman Sharjeel Khan is set to be a piece of the players draft for the fifth version of PSL.
Sharjeel, who finished a five-year boycott for breaking the Pakistan Cricket Board’s Anti-Corruption code in August, has been given leeway by the board to resume playing club cricket.
“Sharjeel Khan as of late showed up in a composed test directed by the PCB’s Anti-Corruption unit and passed it effectively. He has now been advised to make a trip to Bahawalpur, Sheikhupura and Karachi where he will offer talks to individuals from the lesser groups participating in the local youth occasions.
“Without a doubt Sharjeel Khan ought to be cleared to likewise highlight in the players draft for the PSL,” one source in the board said.
The authority said since he finished his boycott, Sharjeel Khan has ticked all the containers required under the counter defilement recovery laws to be qualified to play cricket once more.
The left-hander, 29, had played a Test, 25 ODIs and 15 T20 internationals before he was prohibited from all types of cricket for a long time on August 30, 2017 for his job in the spot-fixing outrage that damaged the Pakistan Super League (PSL’s) second release prior.
The PCB’s Anti-Corruption Tribunal, in the wake of seeing him as liable of breaking five conditions of the board’s enemy of defilement code, said half of his boycott would stay suspended.
Sharjeel Khan, playing for the Islamabad United establishment, was seen as liable by the PCB’s Anti-Corruption Tribunal alongside other Pakistani players like Khalid Latif (who is as yet serving boycott), Muhammad Irfan, Muhammad Nawaz, Nasir Jamshed (as yet serving boycott) and Shahzaib Hasan (still under a boycott).
He and Khalid Latif were suspended and sent back home from Dubai toward the beginning of the PSL in February 2017.