Tamim Iqbal
has said Bangladesh's performance in the Asia Cup was a turning point
in its cricket history but his team could only carry such form into the
five-day format if it played Test matches on a more regular basis.
According to the Future Tours Programme, Bangladesh only play 42 Test
matches until the end of 2020, with no tours of India and England. Their
next Test assignment is against Zimbabwe in August.
"That's the main problem for Bangladesh," Tamim, 23, told ESPNcricinfo.
"The moment we start to do well in Test match cricket, we get a year's
break or a 14-month break. If we want to really improve in Test match
cricket, we need to play the format a lot more. You see us playing ODI
cricket for quite some time and quite regularly, and the performance is
changing. The world is seeing that Bangladesh is coming up. It's the
same with Test cricket.
"We need to play a lot of Test matches to improve, to gain confidence,
to learn how to deal with situations and play session by session."
Bangladesh have lost 63 of their 73 Tests, winning only three since
their debut in 2000-01. They've had more success in ODIs and, most
recently, almost won the Asia Cup, falling short by three runs in the
final against Pakistan. They beat India and Sri Lanka en route to that
final, and ran Pakistan close both times they played.
"We have been playing international cricket for quite some time now and
we needed something like this," Tamim said. "Scoring hundreds is a
habit. Winning matches is a habit. Against India, we chased down 290.
Sometimes when the opposition teams batted first and got to around 300,
if you are not habituated to chasing down those kind of runs you get
confused. So, when you start doing it, you know what to do, how to go
about it, make plans and how to bat.
"The more matches we'll start to win, the better we'll get. So, this was
a great tournament for us because we chased in every single game and
did very well. The boys will remember how we did it and take it
forward."
The Asia Cup was preceded by the inaugural edition of the Bangladesh
Premier League. Tamim missed much of that tournament due to injury, but
said it had an impact on the national team's Asia Cup showing as the
experience of playing with other international stars made its players
more self-confident. "In Bangladesh domestic cricket, you're facing
bowlers bowling at 125-130kmph, so sometimes it's hard to adjust when
playing international cricket.
"But here you've seen Shakib [Al Hasan] playing some unbelievable shots,
which was rare for him. Mushfiqur [Rahim] played an unbelievable
innings against India, hitting sixes. So they're getting this kind of
confidence from BPL."
The build-up to the Asia Cup was mired in controversy
surrounding Tamim's exclusion from the squad, but he was eventually
drafted in and went on to get four half-centuries in a row in the
competition. Tamim admitted he'd been in poor form in the home series
against Pakistan but said he'd been able to recover through practice and
showing more determination at the crease.
"These things happened to me in the last series against Pakistan, and to
be very honest I panicked," he said, about a series in which he had
scores of 0,4 and 0 in the ODIs and averaged just 15 in the Tests. "I
wasn't sure what to do, whether I should relax etc. I practiced really
hard, did everything possible to score runs and I went there, took my
time and eventually it happened."
Tamim, who is the third-highest run-getter for Bangladesh in Tests and
ODIs currently, was grateful for the support of his team-mates during
his exclusion and after his return to the Asia Cup squad. "Sometimes,
when these kinds of things happen in different teams, they talk about
it. They ask you, 'Why did this happen and why were you dropped?'. The
best part of my team was they never talked about this, they always
trusted my ability and knew what I'm capable of.
"If someone else goes through the same period, the boys should react the
same way. It's not the first time a cricketer is facing this kind of
thing. It'll happen again, it's a part of life you know."
Tamim had an excellent run in the Asia Cup but was disappointed not to
have converted those fifties into bigger scores. "When you're going
through a good patch, you should make it count as much as possible.
Someone like Virat Kohli, he's doing tremendously well, scoring hundreds
every second game. The way I got out in the final wasn't good, that is
something to work on."
Tamim was signed up by Pune Warriors
before the ongoing IPL season. "I'm lucky to be part of Pune Warriors
because you've got Indian legends like Sourav Ganguly, someone like
Michael Clarke is also a great player. I'm young and I have a lot to
learn."



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