Mohsin was among the contenders for the job, which he held briefly in 2012 when he oversaw Pakistan's famous 3-0 Test victory over England.
Last month, the PCB decided to not renew Moin Khan's
contract as head coach and started the hunt for a new coaching panel.
The PCB placed a newspaper advert, kept the opportunity open for 18 days
for anyone to apply and appointed a three-man committee to evaluate the
applications until May 5.
Mohsin and Waqar were in the race for the top role and on Tuesday, the
PCB appointed Waqar, who returned for a second term after his previous
stint between March 2010 and August 2011.
"They lied in their own house," Mohsin, who was rejected without
interview, said. "They had said that the candidates will be shortlisted,
then there will be interviews but they trashed the whole process and
made fun of everything. They threw dust in everyone's eyes. There were
no criteria. I was a deserving candidate but I was getting messages that
the whole process was a total farce."
There was a perception that the board was already in contact with Waqar
and that he was the only one in line for the job. Though Waqar's
appointment was made official only on May 6, his name was unofficially
doing the rounds before the deadline for candidates ended.
"They should have picked whoever they wanted as coach and appointed him
but they should not have made a fool of the others. It happened before
as well before the Asia Cup and World T20. It happened to Waqar as well
at that time. Without any process they made Moin Khan coach. Moin is
like my younger brother, but that was also not correct. PCB is not their
personal property; it is the board of 18-19 million people of Pakistan.
They spoiled two years of the team by bringing a so-called qualified
coach (Dav Whatmore). They threw dust in the fans' eyes. They have played with Pakistan's name, with its respect."
Mohsin was the chief selector in 2011 when Waqar quit after his first
stint as head coach and the PCB was forced to go with the former as
interim coach before he was replaced by Whatmore in March 2012. Though
Mohsin was given a makeshift role, he wanted to carry on in the job but
the then chairman Zaka Ashraf opted to engage Whatmore instead.
Umar Farooq is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @kalson
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
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