Mushfiqur bemoans Bangladesh bowlers' inability to get reverse swing

The spinners have dominated the first Test on a turning track but it was the England seamers who made the difference in Chittagong.

Sports Correspondentbdnews24.com
Published : 25 Oct 2016, 02:53 PM
Updated : 25 Oct 2016, 02:53 PM

Their ability to get the ball to reverse swing is what stood out as England conjured up a 22-run win at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium on Monday.

Shafiul Islam and Kamrul Islam Rabbi's efforts with the old ball did not produce anything remotely close to what Ben Stokes and Stuart Broad pulled off using the rough and shiny sides of the ball.

Captain Mushfiqur Rahim believes the reason for the Bangladesh pacers' incapacity lies in local first-class cricket.

In the National Cricket League and Bangladesh Cricket League, the two tournaments competed in four-day matches, pacers rarely get the chance to bowl with the old balls. They bowl the opening overs with the new ball and then the spinners take over.

The Bangladesh skipper thinks for a team to do well on pitches like the ones in Chittagong, the pacers must be well-versed in the art of reverse swinging the old ball.

"I've said this before. If a bowler doesn't even know how to bowl with the old ball…how to set a batsman up, how to bowl strategically…can we expect him to do well against a big team in a Test match?" he said.

"How many of our pacers bowl with the old ball in first-class cricket? If you look at scorecards, regardless of the wicket being a grassy one or anything else…you will see spinners taking five wickets and pacers getting one or two."

The tendency of relying too much on spin is also carried over to Bangladesh's five-day game. The spinners took 18 wickets for Bangladesh in the Chittagong Test, Rabbi grabbed the lone wicket from a seamer and the other was a run out.

Years of practice and devotion have led Broad, who played his 99th Test in Chittagong, to where he is now. He and Stokes have joined forces to torment batsmen in the recent years.

Mushfiqur is unwilling to compare them with Shafiul and Rabbi.

"It's not that Shafiul and Rabbi were terrible. They got an opportunity to learn how important every run is on a wicket like this, how important each spell is.

"I think they now have a good understanding that such reverse swings can be found with old balls. I hope they will learn from this."

Bangladesh have left out Shafiul for the second Test in Dhaka but Rabbi retained his spot in the squad. The Dhaka Test begins on Friday.