A fresh wave of turbulence has hit the Pakistan Super League (PSL) after Multan Sultans’ owner Ali Tareen publicly accused PSL management of cutting off communication regarding the franchise’s renewal and valuation process, threatening legal action if the matter is not resolved.
Tensions between Ali Tareen and PSL have been building for some time, and the issue came to the fore recently when PSL initiated a litigious action against the Sultans’ owner. Ali responded to the legal letter in a mocking tone, which set the stage for PSL management’s latest move of withholding a renewal agreement from the current owners.
In a strongly worded statement shared by Ali Tareen, he revealed that his team has spent over a month chasing answers, sending repeated emails, legal notices, and even a formal letter to the PCB Chairman, all of which went unanswered.
According to the Sultans, the issue is straightforward. PSL has not provided them with the valuation report or the renewal letter, despite the fact that every other team has already received theirs.
The franchise claims there has been no reply to their legal correspondence, no response to multiple emails, no acknowledgement of their letter to the Chairman, and no explanation for why Multan alone is being excluded from the process.
Even representatives from other franchises, according to the statement, have questioned why Multan Sultans, one of the PSL’s most consistently successful teams in recent years, is being sidelined.
Ali Tareen expressed disappointment at having to go public, noting that they initially attempted to resolve the matter behind closed doors. However, with complete silence from PSL management, he said the franchise now feels forced to escalate.
“If this ghosting continues, we will have no choice but to take legal action, which is the absolute last thing we want to do,” the statement reads.
He added that the dispute was “so unnecessary and could have easily been solved over tea and biscuits,” suggesting that personal ego clashes are to blame.
The escalating tension comes at an especially delicate time, with the eleventh edition of the PSL set for an expanded field. Any legal showdown or administrative conflict could create fresh complications for a league that has already struggled with internal disputes and management turnover in recent years.
For the PSL, a competition celebrated worldwide for its cricketing quality, the optics of a franchise feeling sidelined and ignored by its own governing body raise concerning questions about transparency and governance.
With Multan Sultans openly signaling readiness for court proceedings, the ball is now firmly in the PCB and PSL management’s court, both literally and figuratively.
If the silence continues, Pakistan cricket may soon find itself dealing with a legal battle that could have been avoided, as the franchise itself put it, “over tea and biscuits.”