DUBLIN: Ireland are open to touring Pakistan if ‘all the stars align’, the chief executive of men’s Test cricket’s newest nation has said.

The Irish made their Test debut with a highly creditable five-wicket loss to Pakistan at Malahide Cricket Club, Dublin concluded on Tuesday.

The match further strengthened the cricket bonds between Ireland and Pakistan, which date back to when the non-Test nation knocked the sub-continental giants out of the 2007 World Cup with a stunning win in Jamaica.

Pakistan became a no-go area for leading cricket teams after an attack by armed militants on Sri Lanka’s team bus in Lahore in 2009, with the United Arab Emirates becoming the team’s unofficial home.

Zimbabwe became the first major international team to return to Pakistan in 2015, while April saw World Twenty20 champions West Indies visit for a three-match T20 series.

Ireland were due to tour Pakistan in 2014 only for the trip to be cancelled after militants attacked Karachi airport.

The Pakistan Cricket Board hope to be able to host a full series by 2020 and Cricket Ireland chief executive Warren Deutrom said on Tuesday that his organisation remained ‘very amenable’ to touring Pakistan.

“We haven’t received an official invitation,” Deutrom said following the end of the Test match. “The chairman of the Pakistan Board was here. I haven’t had a complete debrief with our chairman yet to see whether or not those conversations took place but I wouldn’t even say those conversations even started here.

“For months, years, we’ve actually said to Pakistan, when you think it’s right, safe to invite us, when you want to, economically or commercially, we are very amenable to an invitation,” he added.

“When you send an invitation we presume it’s because you perceive it to be safe enough for us to receive the invitation and then when you give us all the security arrangements around that we will look at that seriously, share them with our players, government, insurers and if all the stars align, we’d be happy to come.”

Published in Dawn, May 17th, 2018

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