The adjudicator, a former Supreme court judge, dismissed Sharjeels appeal and also the appeal filed by the PCB seeking a longer punishment and imposition of a fine on the batsman.
The Anti-Corruption tribunal had imposed a five-year ban, half of it suspended, on Sharjeel after finding him guilty on all five counts of charges related to the PCBs anti- corruption code in September.
Sharjeel was found guilty of meeting with a suspected bookmaker and accepting an offer to spot-fix during a match of the Pakistan Super League in Dubai in February.
Sharjeels lawyer confirmed that the batsman would now most probably file another appeal in the High Court. Sharjeel has pleaded not guilty to all five charges brought against him by the PCB and had appealed for the dismissal of the ban imposed on him by the tribunal.
Also Read
The PCBs adjudicator is also expected to give a decision on the appeal filed by Khalid Latif who has been banned for five years and fined one million rupees for the same breaches including one additional charge of instigating other players to spot-fix.
Both the players can appeal in the High Court in the second step and as a final resort can approach the International Court of Arbitration in Sports in Geneva if their appeals are dismissed.
The PSL spot-fixing scandal shook Pakistan cricket and led to suspensions of four other national team players, Shahzaib Hasan, Nasir Jamshed, Muhammad Irfan and Muhammad Nawaz.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content