After the debacle in New Zealand and Australia, the PCB took unprecedented steps -- barring Yousuf and Younis definitely, slapping one-year ban on Shoaib Malik and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan and imposing fine, apart from six months' probation, on Kamran and Umar Akmal and Shahid Afridi.
Yousuf had been Pakistan's batting mainstay for quite a while.
The right-hander, then a Christian called Yousuf Youhana, made his Test debut in Johannesburg in 1998 and went on to play 88 Tests, amassing 7431 runs at an average of 53.07. He played 282 ODIs as well, scoring 9624 runs with an average of 42.39.
Yousuf, who won the International Cricket Council (ICC) Test batsman of the year award in 2006 for his record-breaking spree of run-scoring when he got nine centuries, originally retired from international cricket when he joined the unofficial Indian Cricket League in 2007 but later returned to play for Pakistan.
Yousuf, who refused to take any questions at the press conference, said that he would continue to play domestic cricket and in foreign leagues as he didn't want to lose contact with the game.
"I have decided it is best that I retire from international cricket now but I will continue to play domestic cricket and in foreign leagues to keep in touch with the sport," Yousuf said.
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