"I don't think most cricket boards and players will now be as receptive and supportive for the PSL. I fear the top players who care for their reputations will stay away from it. Only those players will come who want to make money," Miandad said today.
The PSL, into its second edition in Dubai, was rocked yesterday when the Pakistan Cricket Board announced it had sent back two national team players, Sharjeel Khan and Khalid Latif, under its anti-corruption code.
The PCB confirmed that it had immediately suspended the central contracts of Sharjeel and Khalid Latif.
The ACU further questioned three more players, Zulfiqar Babar, Shahzaib Hasan and Muhammad Irfan, but cleared them to play for their franchises.
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Tall left-arm pacer Irfan was allowed to play for Islamabad but the franchise didn't select him for today's match against Lahore Qalanders.
"Our league was free of such controversies but now the PSL is also damaged and I don't think it will be the same again," Miandad said.
Former Test captain Aamir Sohail noted that betting syndicates had always targetted leagues held in the sub-continent and region.
"T20 leagues and tournaments are soft targets to corrupt players and we have seen it happen in domestic T20 matches as well in recent times."
"The PCB should have been very careful while launching the PSL in Dubai which is home to syndicates," Sohail said.
Former opener Mohsin Khan, who has remained chief selector and head coach of the Pakistan team, said he had always feared something like this would happen when the board itself was encouraging and appointing tainted people to different positions in PCB and in PSL.
"I am saddened by what has happened but we shouldn't be surprised because the PCB itself is to blame for not taking stringent steps and banning corrupt players for life," Mohsin said.
Former test spinner Iqbal Qasim said the latest controversy has badly hurt the PSL.
"I am very angry because don't these players realise the damage they do to our cricket and the PSL with such selfish acts," he said.