Shahid Afridi Defends Himself After Media Row, No Apology Yet
Shahid Afridi was asked by a journalist at a training camp in Lahore on Wednesday how he would improve his captaincy after a recent 3-0 loss against England in the United Arab Emirates saw Pakistan plummet to sixth in the world Twenty20 rankings, from a high of second.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: January 07, 2016 05:09 pm IST
Pakistan's Twenty20 captain Shahid Afridi defended himself on Thursday after a row with a television journalist that prompted the media to briefly boycott coverage of an ongoing training camp. (Shahid Afridi Walks Out of Press Conference After Spat With Reporter)
Afridi was asked by 'Dunya News' journalist Sanaullah Khan at the camp in Lahore on Wednesday how he would improve his captaincy after a recent 3-0 loss against England in the United Arab Emirates saw Pakistan plummet to sixth in the world Twenty20 rankings, from a high of second. (James Anderson Helps England Dominate Proceedings Against Pakistan in Sharjah)
A miffed Afridi retorted: "I expected you to ask such a pathetic and low question, someone ask the next question please." (ODI Loss Against England is an Eye Opener, Says Waqar Younis)
The dismissive reply on live television ignited anger among journalists, who boycotted the remainder of the planned events on Wednesday and demanded an apology.
Khan, who had asked Afridi a similar question in November and received a similar answer, even took to Twitter with a live #AskSana question-and-answer session about the incident.
On Thursday, Afridi defended himself and accepted responsibility for the humiliation in the UAE.
"I always respect others and demand the same from others," he said.
"It's under my captaincy that the team rose to number two but we made basic errors to lose against England and that affected our rankings."
Team manager Intikhab Alam managed to pacify the media, who returned on Thursday to cover the final day of the camp.
"I have talked to Afridi and he has reiterated that he respects the media, so hopefully such an incident will not happen again," Alam said on Thursday.
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said the incident should not be blown out of proportion.
"It should not have happened," PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan told media.
"We will look into it but don't take it as something big."
Afridi has led Pakistan since Mohammad Hafeez stepped down in 2014, winning six of the last 10 matches.
Pakistan will fly to New Zealand on January 10 to play three Twenty20 matches and as many one-day internationals, the first in Auckland on January 15.
Afridi said he was sure the players would improve their rankings during the tour.