Bangladesh is pinning its hopes on all-rounder and former lawmaker Shakib Al Hasan to âdo something specialâ against pace-heavy Pakistan in the opening test of the two-match series, starting Wednesday.
â(Shakib) played this game for so long, so he knows his role,â Bangladesh captain Najmul Hossain Shanto said on the eve of the first test match at Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium.
âHe knows how to prepare himself, so I am not thinking about his political career, and I hope he will do something special in this series. Heâs a professional cricketer, and we all treat him as a cricketer, to be very honest.â
Bangladeshâs most accomplished all-rounder, spin great Shakib was playing in the T20 league in Canada during political turmoil in his country back home.
The unrest hampered preparations and Bangladesh flew to Pakistan four days ahead of schedule to get an additional three days of training in Lahore.
Rawalpindi will host both the test matches.
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The series is part of the World Test Championship in which Pakistan is languishing at the No. 6 spot while Bangladesh is at No. 8, above last-place West Indies.
Pakistan has an impressive test record against Bangladesh, winning all but one of the 13 matches. The teams drew at Khulna in Bangladesh in 2015.
Shanto said it wonât be easy for Bangladesh against a four-pronged pace Pakistan pace attack, led by Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah. And Pakistan pacers have happy memories of Rawalpindi. Four years ago, a hat trick from Shah helped Pakistan to inflict a crushing innings and 44 runs defeat on Bangladesh.
Shanto, who was among Shahâs hat-trick wickets in that 2020 test, said âItâs not going to be easy,â but remained hopeful.
âWe have a very good balanced side and we believe we can do some special things this time,â he said Tuesday.
The series will be the first test for Pakistanâs new red-ball head coach Jason Gillespie of Australia. Pakistan was swept 3-0 by Australia in the last test series it played eight months ago. That was also Shan Masoodâs debut test series as Pakistan captain.
âThere were some mistakes that we made that cost us probably the Melbourne and Sydney test matches,â Masood said. âBut as a team, we were heading in the right direction, so thatâs something that weâll take with us.â
Masood said results in the domestic matches at Rawalpindi have encouraged him to go with an all-out pace attack that also features fast bowlers Khurram Shahzad and Mohammad Ali in the playing XI.
âYou have to be very flexible and you have to adapt and adopt different conditions,â Masood said. âI feel in Rawalpindi ⌠the conditions have favoured the seamers and the batters, spin bowling hasnât been such a big threat.â
