On January 11, 2025, the draft for the 10th season of PSL will be held. The PCB no longer views a clash with the IPL as a no-go area, so the draft date is later than PSL drafts have historically occurred. This is partly because the tournament window was pushed back by one month, taking place in a four-week window between early April and mid-May.
While no additional information about player availability has been released by PCB. But the draft is majorly expected to rely on players that went unsold at the IPL 2025 mega auction. One of the elements that influenced the PSL’s transition into the IPL’s slot was improved trust that players who were not in the IPL would be available due to the near-complete lack of international fixtures at the time.
In this year’s IPL auction, big names like David Warner, Kane Williamson, and Jonny Bairstow are among the IPL players who went unsold. The best part of it for PSL organizers is the majority of them may not have had international obligations because at the time of IPL, the majority of the test-playing nations avoid playing international cricket.
The countdown begins… ⏳
— PakistanSuperLeague (@thePSLt20) December 10, 2024
📅 Save the date: 11th January 2025
Get ready for the #HBLPSL Draft! pic.twitter.com/UvVN7rukC0
However, this does not guarantee that all the foreign players that went unsold in IPL will be available for the PSL, because the ECB (England Cricket Board) played the party spoiler’s role for PCB and PSL after disallowing its players to play in the Pakistan Super League. The decision is more impactful because PSL traditionally attracted a lot of overseas talent from England compared to other countries.
The ECB is now immersed in a disagreement with the Professional Cricketers’ Association (PCA) after they stated they would not give NOCs for first-class cricketers to play in overseas league other than the IPL, which coincided with the domestic season.
The PCB hopes to make the move into the IPL window permanent as it attempts to shift away from the increasingly limited December-March window in which it presently operates, which coincides not only with four other T20 leagues but also with a hectic international cricket schedule.
Moving to the April-May window, on the other hand, implies little to no full-member international cricket and only the IPL, against which authorities admit they cannot compete but can coexist. And, if the PSL does, as predicted, induct two new teams in 2026, there is still room for a longer season within that timeframe.
In the medium term, it will also prevent PSL from being played virtually exclusively during Ramadan. Ramadan begins ten days earlier on the Gregorian calendar each year as part of the lunar calendar; therefore, it will collide with the PSL’s customary February-March window in the coming years.
Ramadan not only affects game schedules and fan turnout, but it also provides a significant window for advertising; playing the PSL during Ramadan would have an impact on the league’s advertising and sponsorship earnings.
The decision to switch to the IPL window was not unanimous. According to some reports, several PSL team owners were skeptical, if not overtly opposed, to the decision at the time. However, the decision did not require franchises’ approval, as the PSL’s governing council make a unilateral decision on the topic.
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