Bangladesh could play four spinners against Australia

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

In Bangladesh’s last home Test series their spinners incredibly took 38 out of 39 wickets. Now Australia look set to face at least four Bangladeshi spinners during the first Test in Dhaka in 12 days’ time.

Because quality left arm spinner Shakib Al Hasan bats in the top six, Bangladesh have the luxury of stacking their line-up with slow bowlers in their spin-friendly home conditions.

Against Australia, Shakbib will be joined by 19-year-old off-spin prodigy Mehidi Hasan, with accurate left arm tweaker Taijul Islam a leading contender to be the third spinner. It was Shakib, Mehidi and Taijul who took those aforementioned 38 wickets in the drawn two-Test series against England last year.

Mehedi had an extraordinary debut Test series, hoarding 19 wickets at 16, and received robust support from Shakib (12 wickets at 18) and Taijul (seven wickets at 23).

Mehedi, Shakib and Taijul all were named in Bangladesh’s enormous 29-man preliminary squad for the two Tests against Australia.

(AP Photo/A.M. Ahad, file)

So, too, was experienced all-rounder Mohammad Mahmudullah, a stalwart of the Bangladesh Test team who bats in the top six and also has 39 wickets from 33 matches with his off breaks.

Shakib and Mehedi are locks for the first Test against Australia, while Taijul and Mahmudullah are likely to play, too, giving Bangladesh four spin options.

The hosts would then still be able to play two specialist quicks if they choose. Left arm paceman Mustafizur Rahman is a certainty, with the 21-year-old prodigy having taken 12 wickets at 23 in Tests to go with 44 wickets at 20 in ODIs. Mustafizur’s incumbent new ball partner is right armer Subashis Roy, who has struggled in his three Tests, taking six wickets at 58.

The other specialist pacemen to have played Tests for Bangladesh this year have similarly awful career records – Rubel Hossain (32 wickets at 78), Taskin Ahmed (seven wickets at 81), and Kamrul Islam (seven wickets at 57). Apart from the gifted Mustafizur, Bangladesh’s pace options are very poor.

So, considering the strong preference of the Australian batsman to face pace over spin, and the dead nature of the Bangladesh pitches, it is possible the hosts might even field only one quick in Mustafizur.

In such a scenario they could play three specialist tweakers plus spinning all-rounders Shakib and Mahmudullah. Regardless, Australia look likely to face an even heavier spin assault than they received earlier this year in India.

While India have the world’s two highest-ranked Test spinners (Ravi Jadeja and Ravi Ashwin), their quicks also played a major role in that series.

Umesh Yadav was the best fast bowler from either team in that series, while fellow seamers Ishant Sharma and Bhuvneshwar Kumar were also given significant roles with the ball. India got 22 wickets from pace across those four Tests, compared to Bangladesh’s one wicket from pace across two Tests in their last home series.

While India used two quicks in tandem at times against Australia, I expect Bangladesh will always have at least one spinner in the attack during both of the upcoming Tests. The series opener will be played at Dhaka’s Shere Bangla National Stadium, one of the happiest hunting grounds for spinners in world cricket.

When Bangladesh last played there, defeating England by 108 runs last October, spinners grabbed 32 of the 40 wickets for the match. Even England’s mediocre tweakers Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid enjoyed the surface, with the former snaring 5-57 in the first dig and the latter grabbing 4-52 in the second.

Australia displayed better technique and temperament with the blade against spin in India after their floundering efforts in Sri Lanka last year. Now they are set to encounter what will likely be an even more unrelenting trial by spin in Bangladesh.

The Crowd Says:

2017-08-21T04:17:01+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


The case is different for Mahmudullah. He is on his way to CPL suggesting that he would not be considered for the 2nd test as well.

2017-08-21T04:15:06+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


Mominul is back with mossaddek dropped. The coach however is not happy.

2017-08-20T15:51:28+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


well. We are as confused as you are. it seems that our Lankan coach doesn't rate him very highly. still should be back for the 2nd test at Chittagong. His record there is impressive. As for Imrul, he does score heavily in domestic cricket. Yet to show his best in the bigger arena.

AUTHOR

2017-08-20T13:07:59+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hi Rafiqul, it is mystifying why Bangladesh would leave out Mominul Haque, who averages 47 with the bat after 22 Tests, in favour of Imrul Kayes who has a woeful Test record (avg 28 after playing 28 Tests).

2017-08-20T11:52:59+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


The selectors here has named a 14 member squad for the 1st test. Mahmudullah is dropped, but the biggest shock is the exclusion of ,Mominul, the reliable middle order bat. All rounder Nasir Hossain and medium pacer Shafiul islam are recalled.

2017-08-19T17:02:28+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


The weather forecast for the next week or so is quite good for Bangladesh and North East India. While it doesn't guarantee uninterrupted test matches; it certainly comes as a great relief for the flood affected people in north western Bangladesh and in north eastern India.

2017-08-19T16:58:59+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


After a series of grey and wet days, Saturday morning dawned bright and sunny here in Dhaka. Whether the arrival of the Aussie team in the Friday evening has anything to do with it, i don't know.

2017-08-19T16:56:34+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


Shakib, Mehedi and Taijul will hold the key for Bangladesh.

AUTHOR

2017-08-15T14:00:13+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I agree, I can't see Moeen averaging less than 45 with the ball in this Ashes (he averaged 45 in the last Ashes in England). The best England can hope for is that Moeen can perform a holding role and keep things fairly tight while their quicks seek wickets.

2017-08-15T13:18:38+00:00

13th Man

Guest


Moeen Ali won't be a threat in Australia. It's a spinners graveyard and far better Spinners including Swann, Ashwin and Herath have all struggled in recent times and there far better Spinners than Ali

2017-08-15T13:09:07+00:00

13th Man

Guest


There was an article about it yesterday on Cricket Australia and in a perfect world that's what I would do. It has worked for England with Bairstow but I don't know whether it would affect his batting which is very good at the moment.

2017-08-15T09:04:10+00:00

DavSA

Guest


Not only could play 4 spinners but probably would. It is never an easy series in Bangladesh and I am real pleased to see that interest globally seems to be pretty high . I think that Australia wouldn't mind the exposure and match time against turners , particularly leggies. Moeen Ali is certainly looming as a threat in the upcoming Ashes series and a barrage of quality practice ....no offence meant to Bangladesh would be very welcome.

AUTHOR

2017-08-15T08:15:55+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


That batting lineup certainly looks very strong. It will be interesting to see if the selectors ever ask Handscomb to try taking the gloves.

AUTHOR

2017-08-15T08:12:06+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hi Pope, the Bangladesh pitches of late have been similar to the decks Australia played on in Sri Lanka last year - no wild turn but decent grip from the first session and plenty of natural variation in bounce and degrees of turn. They're pancakes for the quicks but accurate spinners are very hard to counter because of the natural variation.

2017-08-15T07:12:57+00:00

13th Man

Guest


I really wish they would consider giving the gloves to Handscomb. He's been doing it in the tour match and for team balance it just makes us look so much stronger as we can play a team along the lines of Warner Renshaw Uzzy Smith Handscomb Cartwright Maxwell Agar Cummins Lyon Hazelwood That's 6 bowling options and a strong top 8.

2017-08-15T07:03:02+00:00

Savage

Roar Rookie


"Bangers wickets are traditionally flat rather than mad turners aren’t they?"Yes most of the time.But they can surprise any opposition with their pitches.for ex-Ban vs England test series(2016) and BAN vs IND(2014 3 odi series).In one of the odi's,India defended 100 when ban was bundled out for 58.Stuart Binny took career best 6 wicket for 4 runs in that match.India was all out 2 out of 3 times under 150 in that series. BAN realises that if they prepare traditional pitches,it will be huge advamtage for Ausralia.So expect similar pitches tthat they prepare for england recently.

2017-08-15T04:01:09+00:00

Duncan Smith

Guest


Makes a change from the Windies 4-pronged pace attack of the 70s.

2017-08-15T02:46:56+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Guest


Bangers wickets are traditionally flat rather than mad turners aren't they? Not much of a life for seamers. They can play 10 spinners. Just play straight and get to the pitch lads. Easy, peasy.......I hope.

2017-08-15T01:53:33+00:00

The Fatman

Guest


Why not play 5 spinners.

2017-08-15T00:24:42+00:00

Tom of Brisbane

Guest


The real question is - will we see any of it? It's not on Fox Sports guide for the 27th

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar