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Sania Mirza has recently broken her engagement with family friend Sohrab Mirza when rumours about her marriage were sky high.
Shoaib Malik is recently banned by PCB for one year due to his roo rude behaviour with all team mates in Australian Tour and he is involved in another scandal,
On the other hand, the trouble maker in the Pakistani cricket team and the play boy, Shoaib Malik has remained in number of scandals during the course of last couple of years or so.
In 2008, an Indian girl named Ayesha claimed that Shoaib Malik had married with her, but Malik constantly denied the accusations.
This marriage scandal is a fraud as no nikah or rukhsati took place and the parents of Ayesha are dishonouring the religion, Malik’s brother in law had told a channel.
Ayehsa’s parents had invited the Pakistan cricket team at dinner in 2005, but they did not show the girl on the insistence of Inzamam-ul-Haq nor they arranged any meeting with her despite his efforts, said Zafar.
"This is my retirement. I have retired from international cricket," Yousuf told reporters in Karachi. "I received a letter from the PCB that my staying in the team is harmful for the team, so I announce my retirement from international cricket." However, when asked if the decision was final, Yousuf said: "For now, this is what I can see, that my playing for Pakistan is damaging. For now, this is it, for now this is my retirement.
"I thank the fans around the world, all the senior players and family members for supporting me throughout my 12-year career. I always played for my country and if my playing is harmful for the team then I don't want to play," he said.
Yousuf had, last week, said he was preparing to retire and that he would make a formal announcement today. He played 88 Tests, nine as captain and scored 7,431 runs at an average of 53.07, including 24 centuries. He also scored 9,624 runs in 282 one-day internationals.
Yousuf was among seven Pakistan players penalised, for various reasons, by the PCB. He and Younis Khan were handed indefinite bans, Shoaib Malik and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan were banned for a year while Shahid Afridi and the Akmal brothers were fined and placed on probation for six months.
The recommendations for punishment were made by an inquiry committee set up by the board after Pakistan were beaten in each of their nine international matches on the tour of Australia. Seven of those losses - three in Tests and four in ODIs - came under the leadership of Yousuf.
In their findings, the board blamed Yousuf and Younis for spreading infighting and indiscipline within the side . He was subsequently not included in the central contracts list for this year.
"Everyone has their own thinking and the disciplinary committee has its own thinking and I haven't understood the reasons for it, or senior players, or the public," Yousuf said. Among the seven penalised players, Afridi has already lodged an appeal against the punishment while Malik and Naved are preparing to do so. Yousuf said he'd "speak to elders" over whether to follow suit. "Retirement I have given but as far as the appeal is concerned I will speak to my elders and if they allow me to, I will appeal," he said.
While he's ruled himself out of international cricket for the time being, Yousuf said he would continue playing first-class and league cricket.
Like the rest of the country, Pakistani girls are up in arms celebrating their recent cricketing win. The Twenty20 world cup was a much needed boost to the national morale of Pakistanis, being bogged down recently in the Swat war. Pakistani girls are avid cricketing fans as can be gauged by the ample female presence at most cricket matches at home and abroad.
Cricket is a national passion in Pakistan, and is loved by both male and female citizens. Pakistani girls are now creating local all-female cricketing elevens. In localities in Model Town, Lahore and Tench Bhata, Rawalpindi for example, Pakistani girls have created their own local teams and are excited at the idea of competing at the national level. “Sports is a much needed outlet for the downtrodden women of this country,” said Lahori citizen Amira Janjua. “Pakistani girls have proven that they are second to none. Now all we need is a female 20 20 right here in this country.”