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Saturday May 04, 2024

‘BD believed they were favourites’

DHAKA: It was self-belief that helped Bangladesh record a history series win against Pakistan, Mashrafe Mortaza announced after his team’s victory in the second ODI in Mirpur on Sunday night.Mashrafe said the team’s belief before the ODI series that they were favourites kept them in the right frame of mind.Pakistan

By our correspondents
April 21, 2015
DHAKA: It was self-belief that helped Bangladesh record a history series win against Pakistan, Mashrafe Mortaza announced after his team’s victory in the second ODI in Mirpur on Sunday night.
Mashrafe said the team’s belief before the ODI series that they were favourites kept them in the right frame of mind.
Pakistan became the fourth Full-Member nation after Zimbabwe, West Indies and New Zealand to lose an ODI series to Bangladesh.
Pakistan have looked short of experience with the ODI retirements of Misbah-ul-Haq and Shahid Afridi, but Mashrafe said every team goes through such phases, and Bangladesh’s win wouldn’t be diminished despite their opposition’s weakness.
“Shakib (Al Hasan) and (Mahmudullah) Riyad said before the ODI series that we start as favourites,” Mashrafe said. “It was a feeling within the team too. We all believed that we were favourites. I felt it was important for our preparation. If you say Pakistan is inexperienced, teams go through such phases. It is quite natural. They take a bit of time. But they have a world-class bowling attack. I wouldn’t say there’s a huge difference between the two sides.”
While Mashrafe did not want his team to turn the confidence from the 2-0 lead into impudence, he said it was also important to celebrate such an occasion.
“When we had returned home from the World Cup, there were moments when I felt whether we were being given too much importance,” Mashrafe said. “Continuing on our World Cup performance was on my mind, so the subsequent series was always going to be important. I think the boys should be proud of what they have achieved, but they don’t need to make it too apparent.
“We should keep it among ourselves,” he said. “But we must also celebrate this victory, enjoy it. We saw how Australia celebrated after beating us in 2003. They never took a win for granted. Similarly, if we don’t enjoy our successes, it will be hard to keep hold of the winning feeling.”
Mashrafe felt that a good start with the bat was necessary to ward off any threat from Pakistan’s bowling attack. Soumya Sarkar fell after hitting four boundaries off 11 balls but Tamim Iqbal kept finding the boundaries. Bangladesh’s score of 83 for 1 was their second highest in an ODI after 10 overs. Tamim and Mahmudullah added 78 for the second wicket before Tamim and Mushfiqur Rahim added their second consecutive 100-run stand between them, which got them within 22 runs of their winning target.
“Two hundred and forty is not really a good score in modern cricket,” he said. “We never felt it was a tough chase. When we returned to the dressing-room at the break, we were all confident that we will overcome this chase quite easily if we don’t lose early wickets.”