The International Cricket Council (ICC) has congratulated Pakistan for the successful staging of the Pakistan versus the World XI series for the Independence Cup at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore.
In their video messages, ICC Director Giles Clarke and ICC Chief Executive David Richardson thanked the people of Pakistan for embracing the World XI players and said the series has demonstrated Pakistan's passion and love for cricket, as well as its ability to provide an environment in which international cricket stars can show their talent.
Clarke and Richardson, however, added that these are small steps for Pakistan towards the safe and steady revival of bilateral international cricket, and indicated that the next step would be a tour by a full member country as opposed to a composite side.
Clarke, who attended the first two matches, said: "The reception the team received was quite extraordinary, and for all of us, we did our best to interact with the crowd. The reaction of the Pakistanis who were at the ground is something I have never seen in my life. They were so pleased, saying thank you, and they were so excited by the players being there."
"I felt the tour unleashed the deep and powerful emotions that exist around cricket in this country's makeup and its society.
"It has been an enormous challenge to ask the authorities in a town as large as Lahore, as commercially important as Lahore, with such a wide variety of other activities, to allow cricket activity to take over key communication channels and travel arteries for the period we have. It is clearly a tremendous economic gesture by the Punjab government but an equally extraordinarily competent detailed planning by all the government agencies involved and the security advisors to the tour," he added.
The ICC Director further said that this courageous team, its management and all the people in Pakistan, who have been involved, have demonstrated that it is possible for overseas players to come to Pakistan and show their skills in Pakistan and be able to give the people of Pakistan the chance to watch their own heroes in action against the best international players.
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"It has been a fantastic tournament and I am very grateful to everybody for all the hard work - by the PCB and everybody else," he said.
"From my point of view, as chairman of the ICC's Pakistan Task Team, I am very pleased that we have accomplished this and I am sure the players will talk to their colleagues and we will see the return of bilateral international cricket to Pakistan," he added
Richardson, who attended the second T20I, said: "One of the main reasons for staging the tour was as a stepping stone to building the confidence that even though there may be some danger to staging sports events or visiting Pakistan, the Pakistan security agencies are more than capable of mitigating that threat."
"The tour having gone off so successfully, the security arrangements having being implemented so well, we can call it a success. The players that came on the tour witnessed the security arrangements firsthand and can go back and report back that although there may be some level of risk, it can be managed successfully," he added.
The ICC Chief Executive further said that the main objective of the tour was to try to build confidence in the likes of the Australians, South Africans and other countries that the threat can be managed and this tour has shown that is the case.
"The security arrangements were unprecedented, yes, they were severe, but above all, everybody realised that it is all very well to have a security plan on paper but can it be implemented? And that's a question they answered in the affirmative," he said.
"Returning full-time international cricket back to Pakistan is not going to be an overnight miracle. It has to take time. The PSL final was the first step, this is the second. We have now shown that events can be staged in one city over a short period of time in a Twenty20 format. Now, the next steps have to be taken, meaning can they be rolled out in more than one city over a longer period of time. Probably the next steps would be a tour by a full member country as opposed to a composite team," he added.
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