Leading sports news website quotes PCB Chairman Ramiz Raja as having said the board is in the advanced stages of talks with a number of sponsors


The PCB is planning to change the name of Lahore's historic Gaddafi Stadium, which was named after former Libyan president Muammar Gaddafi over 50 years ago. However, the explanation for the move is not political.
According to ESPNcricinfo, PCB Chairman Ramiz Raja said the board was in the advanced stages of talks with a number of sponsors, one of which would earn the opportunity to have the stadium renamed after it.
While there have been various attempts in the past to change the stadium's name, they were always motivated by political considerations. For example, in February 2013 — not long after Gaddafi's demise — the Punjab Olympic Association petitioned the provincial chief minister to rename the stadium to reflect growing public opposition to the deceased Libyan leader.
This time, however, it's all about money. In addition, once sponsors are lined up, the National Stadium in Karachi, as well as other key cricket stadiums across the country, may be renamed as well.
"We acquired the services of YouGov to estimate the brand worth of our stadia, and how much sponsorship deals would be worth," Ramiz said. "That's not just true of the Gaddafi Stadium, but also the NSK and others. We've been working towards this for a while, and the response from sponsors has been satisfactory. Once we finalise a deal [for Lahore], the name Gaddafi will go completely, with a sponsor's name replacing it," ESPNcricinfo reported.
If and when the name change occurs, it will also signal the end of one of cricket's most bizarre venue names. When it was established in 1959, the stadium was initially known as Lahore Stadium. When Gaddafi visited Lahore in 1974, he gave a speech at the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) in support of Pakistan's right to seek nuclear weapons. It prompted Pakistan's then-prime minister, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto to name the country's top cricket stadium after Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
The name of the stadium has developed over time, moving away from the name of the politician who inspired it, and all links between the stadium and the president have long ago been severed. The name is today seen as more of a snapshot of Pakistan's political milieu in the 1970s than an endorsement of any particular foreign policy.
When Gaddafi was deposed, there were strong suggestions Pakistan cricket might look to distance its most famous stadium from him, but that movement gradually dissipated.
SOURCE: ESPNcricinfo
Pakistan, Bangladesh recognise importance of strengthening bilateral ties
- 7 hours ago
SP Adeel Akbar committed suicide, confirms police inquiry report
- 8 hours ago
Dry weather expected in most parts of country
- an hour ago
PM arrives in Riyadh to attend 9th Future Investment Initiative Conference
- 2 hours ago
Kashmir Black Day Rally in capital echoes calls for freedom, justice
- 4 hours ago

Steelers' 1933 striped throwbacks, Chargers' royal top NFL Week 8 uniforms
- 6 hours ago
Kashmiris observe Black Day to denounce India’s illegal occupation
- 44 minutes ago
US Navy helicopter, jet crash into South China Sea
- 7 hours ago

Nike says its first ‘powered footwear’ is like an e-bike for your feet
- 9 hours ago

Meet Mico, Microsoft’s AI version of Clippy
- 9 hours ago

Gold prices plunge in Pakistan, global markets
- 7 hours ago
Indian batsman Iyer hospitalised with lacerated spleen after injury during Australia ODI
- 7 hours ago











