The Pakistan Cricket Board’s newly introduced track-based central contract system has been presented as a modern solution to the evolving demands of international cricket. On paper, the idea appears sensible: reward players according to their specialisation, manage workloads more effectively and create clearer pathways for cricketers across different formats.
Supporters of the model argue that modern cricket has changed. The calendar is more crowded than ever, players face increasing physical demands, and specialisation has become an unavoidable reality. These are valid arguments, and the PCB deserves credit for attempting to adapt to the changing landscape of the game.
The concern, however, is whether the long-term incentives created by this system may unintentionally make Test cricket less attractive for the next generation of Pakistani cricketers.
The issue is not whether players should be rewarded fairly. They absolutely should. The question is whether the rewards being offered today are aligned with the kind of cricketers Pakistan will need tomorrow.
The PSL is not merely Pakistan’s most lucrative cricket competition; it is also the country’s biggest cricketing stage.
For decades, Test cricket has been regarded as the ultimate examination of a player’s skill, temperament and endurance. It remains the format that demands the highest levels of concentration, technical excellence and mental resilience. Yet around the world, administrators are increasingly struggling to preserve its relevance in an era dominated by franchise leagues and T20 cricket.
Pakistan is no exception.
Under the revised domestic structure, first-class match fees have been increased to Rs100,000 per match. While that represents progress, the financial gap between red-ball cricket and franchise cricket remains substantial.
Even for a player committed to the red-ball pathway, the earnings available through domestic cricket and central contracts are difficult to compare with the opportunities available in the Pakistan Super League.
This season, Saim Ayub reportedly became the most expensive Pakistani player in the PSL after being signed by Hyderabad Kingsmen for Rs130 million. Naseem Shah was picked by Rawalpindi for Rs85 million, while Fakhar Zaman and Haris Rauf joined Lahore Qalandars for Rs79.5 million and Rs76 million respectively. Pakistan’s T20 captain Salman Ali Agha was signed by Karachi Kings for Rs58.5 million, while Babar Azam, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Shadab Khan were retained by their respective franchises for Rs70 million each.
And that is only part of the story.
The PSL is not merely Pakistan’s most lucrative cricket competition; it is also the country’s biggest cricketing stage. It dominates television audiences, social media conversations, sponsorship campaigns and public attention. Success in the PSL often leads to endorsement opportunities, commercial partnerships and, increasingly, contracts in franchise leagues around the world.
In many cases, a strong PSL season becomes a gateway to even greater earning potential.
That reality matters.
Imagine you are a 17-year-old cricketer deciding what kind of player you want to become.
One pathway requires years of four-day cricket, long hours developing defensive techniques, learning patience, improving concentration and mastering the physical and mental demands of the longest format.
The other offers greater visibility, stronger commercial opportunities and a significantly higher financial ceiling.
The choice may not be as difficult as administrators would like to believe.
This is where concerns about the new contract system emerge.
Test cricket has historically been responsible for producing the most complete cricketers. The demands of the format force players to develop techniques and habits that often benefit them across every version of the game.
Consider the careers of Virat Kohli, AB de Villiers, Steve Smith, Joe Root and Kane Williamson. Their greatness was not built through early specialisation. It was built through mastering every challenge cricket presented. Test cricket refined their techniques and strengthened their mental discipline, while white-ball cricket expanded their range and adaptability.
Each format strengthened the other.
Pakistan’s greatest players followed a similar path.
The risk is that financial incentives may now encourage young cricketers to specialise before they have fully developed their games. Instead of producing all-format stars, Pakistan could gradually begin producing players whose ambitions are shaped primarily by the demands of T20 cricket.
That may not create immediate problems.
In fact, it may even strengthen Pakistan’s pool of specialist white-ball players in the short term.
The real question is what happens five or ten years from now.
What happens when fewer young batters choose to learn the art of building long innings? What happens when fewer fast bowlers are willing to endure the physical demands of extended spells and multi-day cricket? What happens when Pakistan begins searching for technically complete cricketers capable of succeeding in difficult overseas Test conditions?
By then, the consequences of today’s incentives may become more visible.
The PCB’s new contract system may prove successful in many respects. It may improve workload management, reward specialisation and reflect the realities of modern cricket.
But cricket boards are responsible for more than managing the present. They are also responsible for protecting the future.
If the next generation begins to view Test cricket as financially inferior, commercially irrelevant and professionally limiting, Pakistan may discover that it has won the battle for specialisation while losing something far more important.
Because preserving a red-ball culture is far easier than rebuilding one once it has disappeared.
The writer works as a producer at 365 News and has played cricket at club level