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Can India versus Bangladesh become India's biggest rivalry?

DeadlyVenom

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I wasn't aware of the extent of this rivalry as mainly I have focused on India v Pakistan which admittedly has waned a bit. Indians tried to overhype the BGT based rivalry but it hasn't caught on to the same levels as the Ashes.

I read this main feature article in the esteemed Hindustan times and was taken aback by the depth of the India and Bangladesh rivalry. I never knew it meant so much to the Indian side.

Can this now become the main Indian rivalry in international cricket and can Indian broadcasters cash in on the interest that these matches generate? As the article below states - this stopped becoming a fixture for the Indians but an event.

So based on the above. Can this become the next big rivalry alongside the Ashes?

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India built the bridge in 2000, Bangladesh wants it gone: How a rivalry outgrew cricket​

The India-Bangladesh cricket rivalry has evolved from a friendly introduction in 2000 to an intense competition.​

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India and Bangladesh cricket began as a bridge, not a battleground. Bangladesh entered Test cricket in 2000 against India, and the debut created an enduring subtext: India as the neighbour with experience, Bangladesh as the new entrant determined to belong.

India vs Bangladesh in T20 World Cup 2024. (BCCI X)

A quarter-century later, the relationship has matured into a rivalry - intense, emotional, often decided by inches. Now it has drifted into a rare territory: the T20 World Cup 2026 travel dispute, where logistics and perception threaten to overshadow the sport.

From Dhaka 2000 to a real rivalry

The early years were defined by asymmetry. India had depth, experience, and the stars. Bangladesh were building the habit of top-level cricket. India’s involvement in Bangladesh's first Test played India inside Bangladesh’s origin story in a way nothing can erase.
The dynamic shifted in 2007, when Bangladesh’s World Cup win over India announced that the underdog label would no longer guarantee safety. From then on, India-Bangladesh stopped being a fixture and became an event. Bangladesh began arriving with belief; India began arriving with sharper seriousness, aware that complacency is the quickest route to embarrassment.

Bilateral cricket added texture. Bangladesh at home became a different proposition: slower pitches, more spin, and a crowd that treated India as the measuring stick. India, meanwhile, continued to carry the expectation with resources and repetition: even when conditions were not in their favour, they tended to have more routes to a result.

What fuels it

This rivalry has been powered by two repeat ingredients: contested moments and chaotic endings. The 2015 World Cup quarterfinal sits in the memory because it produced a split-screen reaction - Bangladesh’s anger. India’s insistence that big matches are about controlling the controllables. Officiating debates will always flare, but elite teams keep playing through them, and that is where India held the edge.
The endings have been more defining. In the 2016 T20 World Cup in Bengaluru, Bangladesh came within a couple of clean hits of a famous win, only for the game to flip in the final seconds. Two years later, the Nidahas Trophy final delivered another finish that denied every script. For Bangladesh, these were brutal lesions in how close is not the same as done. For India, they reinforced a hard-earned identity: when the match becomes noise, they hear only the next ball.

That difference shows up in small details - running between wickets under stress, choosing the right length at the death, fielding cleanly when legs are heavy. It is why India’s tight wins often feel less like talent gaps and more like habit.

Why the T20 World Cup 2026 row is different

The current standoff around Bangladesh’s travel for World Cup fixtures is different because it moves the contest away from cricket and into tournament integrity. Global events run on schedules, security planning, and consistent standards. If fixtures become negotiable whenever political temperature rises, the World Cup risks becoming a set of compromises rather than a competition.
From India’s perspective, the point is straightforward: India has repeatedly hosted the IPL and high-attendance internationals across multiple cities with extensive security frameworks. The ability to stage major events is proven. Any relocation decision must be rooted in verified assessments, not in atmosphere or viral anxieties.


And for all the noise, players on both sides have said the cricket itself feels personal because of fans. That passion is a gift - administrators don’t let it become a weapon today.

None of that negates Bangladesh’s duty of care of its players. But duty of care works best through formal coordination: clear protocols, secure travel plans, and strong liaison between boards, local authorities, and the ICC. Turning it into a public contest risks backing everyone into a corner where optics matter more than solutions.

The simplest ending: play the cricket, settle it on the field

The cleanest resolution is also the most sporting one: Bangladesh travel, the ICC enforces its processes, and the rivalry returns to its natural habitat - the pitch. India have little to gain from a diluted event and a lot to gain from winning in full view, against a motivated opponent, with no asterisks attached. Bangladesh, too, gain more by competing than by retreating; rivalries are built by showing up, not by shifting goalposts.

If Bangladesh do arrive, the irony is that the story will quickly shrink back to cricket. A couple of overs of hard fought contest, and suddenly the politics fades and the only language that matters is the scorecard. India-Bangladesh started with a door being opened in 2000. The next chapter should be written the same way this rivalry has always been decided: by nerve, skill and the next ball.


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Bangladesh aren't made for sport.

They can't have a rivalry with anybody, cricket or otherwise.
 
Thing about Bangladesh is 50% of that nation hates India , the other 50% are neutral or pro India

Even as we speak there are long queues in Dhaka outside Indian embassy for getting visa for medical / tourism

No to mention high level trade & business links. Only recently BD annoumced big rice imports from India to tackle inflation.

So while lot of heated stuff on social media - on the ground things are not so bad
 
Here in Kolkata - u will find loads of Bangladeshi tourists in top restaurants. Recently had dinner at a restaurant and met with one such family. They wer cursing the current BD govt for ruining relations with India and making it difficult for Bangladeshi businessmen to travel to India

So I know due to certain posters - people think BD is bitter enemy of India but in real life its hardly true
 
Bangladesh aren't made for sport.

They can't have a rivalry with anybody, cricket or otherwise.

lol. India only play cricket and are yet not the best.

Bangladeshis are better at sports in the UK compared to Indians , esp football.
 
Rivalry Barabar wale loge ke sath hoti hai ye minnow ke sath ni.

Aside Bangladesh, Pakistan has also becomes minnow so no more rivalry with them either.

:klopp :kp
 
lol. India only play cricket and are yet not the best.

Bangladeshis are better at sports in the UK compared to Indians , esp football.

Please, Bangladeshis likely can't even win a game of book cricket or office foosball.
 
Is Hindustan times op-ed incorrect and this is not a major event?
Anyone can share own opinion and I'm sharing my opinion.

For me no rivalry with minnow team who are just Thrashed by India .

For me Pakistan - Afghanistan, Pakistan- USA , Pakistan - Zimbabwe are rivalry.

They are eventually matches team in World cricket.

Can Pakistan takes the revenge of 2024 World T20 humiliation against USA or 2023 World Cup humiliation against Zimbabwe or 2022 World T20 humiliation against Zimbabwe?

:klopp :kp
 
Lol he is 50% Bamgladeshi

In that way there is Michael Chopra , Danny Batth , Dilan Markandey - all of Indian origin

So? lol He plays for the national team.

If Bangladesh had a population near 2 billion, they would beat India in cricket 8/10.

Indian population is the ONLY reason why THEY are decent at ANY SINGLE sport.
:sachin
 
Football is rising in Bangladesh.

Young people (Gen Z) are more into football than cricket.

Football is a pure sport. No ghetto drama like we see in cricket. India completely ruined cricket.

Bangladesh is already better than India, you beat them a few weeks ago.
 
Bangladesh has not yet won any Olympic medals (gold, silver, or bronze) despite participating in every Summer Olympics since 1984, making it the most populous country without an Olympic medal as of now . 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤡🤡🤡🤡

:klopp :kp
Bangladesh is already better than India, you beat them a few weeks ago.
 
Anyone can share own opinion and I'm sharing my opinion.

For me no rivalry with minnow team who are just Thrashed by India .

For me Pakistan - Afghanistan, Pakistan- USA , Pakistan - Zimbabwe are rivalry.

They are eventually matches team in World cricket.

Can Pakistan takes the revenge of 2024 World T20 humiliation against USA or 2023 World Cup humiliation against Zimbabwe or 2022 World T20 humiliation against Zimbabwe?

:klopp :kp
Thankfully you don't get paid for your opinion.
 
So? lol He plays for the national team.

If Bangladesh had a population near 2 billion, they would beat India in cricket 8/10.

Indian population is the ONLY reason why THEY are decent at ANY SINGLE sport.
:sachin
Bangladesh is the world's largest country that has NEVER won anything at the Olympics

Thats how bad they are at sports
 
Bangladesh is already better than India, you beat them a few weeks ago.

Yes. BD beat India in football a few weeks ago.

I think football may become the #1 sport in Bangladesh in 20-30 years. Young people are losing interest in cricket (maybe because India is making cricket farcical and football is the undisputed global sport).
 
Yes. BD beat India in football a few weeks ago.

I think football may become the #1 sport in Bangladesh in 20-30 years. Young people are losing interest in cricket (maybe because India is making cricket farcical and football is the undisputed global sport).

God save the poor football fans in 20-30 years.
 
Yes. BD beat India in football a few weeks ago.

I think football may become the #1 sport in Bangladesh in 20-30 years. Young people are losing interest in cricket (maybe because India is making cricket farcical and football is the undisputed global sport).
It seems like cricket rivalry is catching up with football rivalry
 
It seems like cricket rivalry is catching up with football rivalry

I personally do not care about anything Indian when it comes to cricket. They turned cricket into a ghetto hodgepodge. They are also ruining world cups with farcical antics.

Cricket is no longer a sport with integrity.

Anyway, I enjoy Ashes, AUS-SA, PAK-ENG, BBL, and any series/event where India is not playing. :inti
 
Bangladesh has not yet won any Olympic medals (gold, silver, or bronze) despite participating in every Summer Olympics since 1984, making it the most populous country without an Olympic medal as of now . 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤡🤡🤡🤡

:klopp :kp
And india never won any gold medal during the last olympics while having a big population.
Your point?

Wasnt India the most populous country without winning anything during the last olympics?
 
Bangladesh have been starting to improve in football. Ranking improved.

In recent times, India and Bangladesh have been equal in football.

Last 5 games: India won 1, BD won 1, 3 draws. :inti

1768325030589.png
 
Bangladesh have been starting to improve in football. Ranking improved.

In recent times, India and Bangladesh have been equal in football.

Last 5 games: India won 1, BD won 1, 3 draws. :inti

View attachment 160702

As for cricket, no competition. LOL. India is #3 with Rohit/Kohli and #5 without Rohit/Kohli.

BD is #9 in cricket.

It cannot be a rivalry due to a huge gap in cricket. Also, India have made cricket very farcical and rigged. So, what's the point? :inti
 
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And india never won any gold medal during the last olympics while having a big population.
Your point?

Wasnt India the most populous country without winning anything during the last olympics?
Lol, andhbhakts will never compare India with a country of similar population like China in the Olympics. Instead, they keep comparing India with Bangladesh, Pakistan, etc., just to feel good about themselves. Choti choti khushiyan, that's what this is called. :yk :inti
 
And india never won any gold medal during the last olympics while having a big population.
Your point?

Wasnt India the most populous country without winning anything during the last olympics?
India won 6 medals at the last Olympics. Not great but groundbreaking by desi standards 🤣🤣
 
Bangladesh should stick to wearing Argentina football jersey every 4 years and support Argentina. They can enjoy imaginary rivalry against France, Brazil. Outside that only rivalry i can think of is their nagin rivalry with SL.
 
As for cricket, no competition. LOL. India is #3 with Rohit/Kohli and #5 without Rohit/Kohli.

BD is #9 in cricket.

It cannot be a rivalry due to a huge gap in cricket. Also, India have made cricket very farcical and rigged. So, what's the point? :inti
Yes Bangladesh are destined to be the perennial minnows of world cricket
 
Thing about Bangladesh is 50% of that nation hates India , the other 50% are neutral or pro India

Even as we speak there are long queues in Dhaka outside Indian embassy for getting visa for medical / tourism

No to mention high level trade & business links. Only recently BD annoumced big rice imports from India to tackle inflation.

So while lot of heated stuff on social media - on the ground things are not so bad
Deep down inside, everyone from BD loves India. Them bollywood music/movies are consumed at masses. People be quoting and posting SM post from bollywood movies, lol.

Also having the luxary of making different friends from different background, most BD folks that I know don't really care much. Espacially the current generation.
 
Deep down inside, everyone from BD loves India. Them bollywood music/movies are consumed at masses. People be quoting and posting SM post from bollywood movies, lol.

Also having the luxary of making different friends from different background, most BD folks that I know don't really care much. Espacially the current generation.
My hometown is a major rice exporting hub. Most of the exports go to Bangladesh

Met lots of BD folks. Mostly nice people. Anyways after elections things will get back to normal
 
I definitely think its a battle of equals. I remember virender sehwag’s jibes at bangladesh, to them making that poster of dhoni. Defo has a lot of fire in it.
 
I definitely think its a battle of equals. I remember virender sehwag’s jibes at bangladesh, to them making that poster of dhoni. Defo has a lot of fire in it.
I had to Google some of these incidents and found this from Indian media


There is a lot of spice to this rivalry that I was unaware of and interestingly most of the articles championing it are from the Indian side.

Indian U19s were once beaten up by Bangladeshi U19s too.

This is blockbuster stuff and it looks like Indians are leaning into it heavily. Their racism towards Bangladeshis is just like young teens lashing out trying to get attention from the one they admire.
 
I definitely think its a battle of equals. I remember virender sehwag’s jibes at bangladesh, to them making that poster of dhoni. Defo has a lot of fire in it.

For modern day Bangladesh, India is the #1 enemy (thanks to BJP/RSS/chaiwala Modi/hindu extremists).

Maybe once there is a regime change in India and India become free from sanghi extremists, things can improve.
 
India and Bangladesh have already had a pretty intense rivalry. In fact, there was a period when Bangladesh competed much better against India compared to Pakistan’s often meek surrenders. India vs Bangladesh matches used to be intense, similar to how Pakistan vs Afghanistan is today. However, Bangladeshi cricket has declined, like most things in that country and that rivalry no longer exists.

Bangladesh were genuine minnows until 2014. The closest they came to winning anything before that was the 2012 Asia Cup final against Pakistan, but they couldn’t finish the job. They always had a mental block against big teams. For example, during our tour in 2014, they bowled India out for 103 in one game (Taskin Ahmed’s debut match). Everyone thought Bangladesh would win, but Stuart Binny then bowled them out for 58. :ROFLMAO:

That pretty much summed them up, a proper clownish minnows until the end of 2014.

The 2015 World Cup changed everything. Under Mashrafe Mortaza, they got a respected captain, and they went on to beat England. This was also when most of their top players were in their absolute prime. Then came the quarterfinal against India and the infamous Rohit Sharma no-ball. That incident kick-started the rivalry and became something they couldn’t forget for years. Even though Rohit added only 35 more runs after that no-ball and Bangladesh eventually lost by 109 runs, Bangladeshi fans blamed the umpires entirely. The irony is that the then ICC president from Bangladesh, Mustafa Kamal, even resigned in protest over that no-ball decision.

After that World Cup, both Pakistan and India toured Bangladesh. Pakistan were whitewashed, and India lost the series 2–1. It was Mustafizur Rahman’s debut series, and Indian batters simply couldn’t pick his cutters. That series made Bangladeshi fans and media extremely arrogant. Their tabloid Prothom Alo even published an image showing Indian cricketers with shaved heads, symbolizing Mustafizur’s dominance.:mad:

Then came the 2016 Asia Cup, a time when the tournament essentially revolved around the India–Bangladesh rivalry, with Pakistan nowhere in the picture. India beat Bangladesh in the opening game, but Bangladesh went on to beat every other team, including Pakistan. Before the final against India, their fans became excessively arrogant. They drew a beheaded image of MS Dhoni with blood dripping, held by Taskin Ahmed. That image received massive criticism in India. In the actual match, Dhoni promoted himself up the order and destroyed Bangladesh, including that iconic 104-meter six. The crying faces in the crowd were priceless, along with Ramiz Raja’s commentary: “He has absolutely punctured the spirit of the crowd with that six.” Pure gold.

Soon after, Taskin was reported and banned for chucking ahead of the T20 World Cup. The entire Bangladeshi camp blamed India for it. The rivalry was so intense that I remember a packed Eden Gardens crowd cheering for Pakistan over Bangladesh. Then Bangladesh almost beat India in Bengaluru during the same tournament, but Mushfiqur Rahim couldn’t score 2 runs off 3 balls. :LOL:

Two years later, we faced them again in the Nidahas Trophy. By then, Bangladesh had found a new enemy in Sri Lanka with all the cobra celebrations, and Shakib even broke a dressing-room glass in anger. So when the final was played between India and Bangladesh, the entire Colombo crowd supported India. Bangladesh were on course to win before Dinesh Karthik played the role of the snake charmer. After the win, “cobra” Soumya Sarkar was down, and the entire crowd was chanting naagin, naagin. :D

Nidahas was followed by the Asia Cup in Dubai, where India and Bangladesh again met in the final. Bangladesh were once more on the verge of winning but lost in the last over. Then in the 2020 U-19 World Cup final, India and Bangladesh faced off again—this time Bangladesh won. After the match, there was genuine fighting and hostility between the players.

Then COVID happened. Bangladesh declined, India only got stronger, and the rivalry faded away. But there was a time when India vs Bangladesh was a terrific rivalry. More than the on-field battles, the social media wars and fan clashes were absolutely legendary.
 
India and Bangladesh have already had a pretty intense rivalry. In fact, there was a period when Bangladesh competed much better against India compared to Pakistan’s often meek surrenders. India vs Bangladesh matches used to be intense, similar to how Pakistan vs Afghanistan is today. However, Bangladeshi cricket has declined, like most things in that country and that rivalry no longer exists.

Bangladesh were genuine minnows until 2014. The closest they came to winning anything before that was the 2012 Asia Cup final against Pakistan, but they couldn’t finish the job. They always had a mental block against big teams. For example, during our tour in 2014, they bowled India out for 103 in one game (Taskin Ahmed’s debut match). Everyone thought Bangladesh would win, but Stuart Binny then bowled them out for 58. :ROFLMAO:

That pretty much summed them up, a proper clownish minnows until the end of 2014.

The 2015 World Cup changed everything. Under Mashrafe Mortaza, they got a respected captain, and they went on to beat England. This was also when most of their top players were in their absolute prime. Then came the quarterfinal against India and the infamous Rohit Sharma no-ball. That incident kick-started the rivalry and became something they couldn’t forget for years. Even though Rohit added only 35 more runs after that no-ball and Bangladesh eventually lost by 109 runs, Bangladeshi fans blamed the umpires entirely. The irony is that the then ICC president from Bangladesh, Mustafa Kamal, even resigned in protest over that no-ball decision.

After that World Cup, both Pakistan and India toured Bangladesh. Pakistan were whitewashed, and India lost the series 2–1. It was Mustafizur Rahman’s debut series, and Indian batters simply couldn’t pick his cutters. That series made Bangladeshi fans and media extremely arrogant. Their tabloid Prothom Alo even published an image showing Indian cricketers with shaved heads, symbolizing Mustafizur’s dominance.:mad:

Then came the 2016 Asia Cup, a time when the tournament essentially revolved around the India–Bangladesh rivalry, with Pakistan nowhere in the picture. India beat Bangladesh in the opening game, but Bangladesh went on to beat every other team, including Pakistan. Before the final against India, their fans became excessively arrogant. They drew a beheaded image of MS Dhoni with blood dripping, held by Taskin Ahmed. That image received massive criticism in India. In the actual match, Dhoni promoted himself up the order and destroyed Bangladesh, including that iconic 104-meter six. The crying faces in the crowd were priceless, along with Ramiz Raja’s commentary: “He has absolutely punctured the spirit of the crowd with that six.” Pure gold.

Soon after, Taskin was reported and banned for chucking ahead of the T20 World Cup. The entire Bangladeshi camp blamed India for it. The rivalry was so intense that I remember a packed Eden Gardens crowd cheering for Pakistan over Bangladesh. Then Bangladesh almost beat India in Bengaluru during the same tournament, but Mushfiqur Rahim couldn’t score 2 runs off 3 balls. :LOL:

Two years later, we faced them again in the Nidahas Trophy. By then, Bangladesh had found a new enemy in Sri Lanka with all the cobra celebrations, and Shakib even broke a dressing-room glass in anger. So when the final was played between India and Bangladesh, the entire Colombo crowd supported India. Bangladesh were on course to win before Dinesh Karthik played the role of the snake charmer. After the win, “cobra” Soumya Sarkar was down, and the entire crowd was chanting naagin, naagin. :D

Nidahas was followed by the Asia Cup in Dubai, where India and Bangladesh again met in the final. Bangladesh were once more on the verge of winning but lost in the last over. Then in the 2020 U-19 World Cup final, India and Bangladesh faced off again—this time Bangladesh won. After the match, there was genuine fighting and hostility between the players.

Then COVID happened. Bangladesh declined, India only got stronger, and the rivalry faded away. But there was a time when India vs Bangladesh was a terrific rivalry. More than the on-field battles, the social media wars and fan clashes were absolutely legendary.
Great post.
 
I had to Google some of these incidents and found this from Indian media


There is a lot of spice to this rivalry that I was unaware of and interestingly most of the articles championing it are from the Indian side.

Indian U19s were once beaten up by Bangladeshi U19s too.

This is blockbuster stuff and it looks like Indians are leaning into it heavily. Their racism towards Bangladeshis is just like young teens lashing out trying to get attention from the one they admire.

Historically, they have beaten up PAK U-19's much worse in their H2H which is even more impressive considering that every PAK U-19 team member is usually an age fudger.
 
Bangladesh vs India has become a rivalry at junior level cricket.

At seniors level, the Bangladesh team lacks aggression and skill level to compete against India on a regular basis. Country vs County is no comparison. India is a Top 3 powers in the world today and Bangladesh is among the poorest nations in the world.

Bangladesh diaspora overseas alos cannot match India.
 
The 2015 World Cup changed everything. Under Mashrafe Mortaza, they got a respected captain, and they went on to beat England. This was also when most of their top players were in their absolute prime. Then came the quarterfinal against India and the infamous Rohit Sharma no-ball. That incident kick-started the rivalry and became something they couldn’t forget for years. Even though Rohit added only 35 more runs after that no-ball and Bangladesh eventually lost by 109 runs, Bangladeshi fans blamed the umpires entirely. The irony is that the then ICC president from Bangladesh, Mustafa Kamal, even resigned in protest over that no-ball decision.

Fantastic post, but I disagree that the 2015 World Cup kicked off whatever this rivalry is - that happened back in 2007.

Also - the umpire in question in 2015 was a Pakistani. I began to question Bangladeshi fans' IQ after they went on a flaming rampage that day.
 
Geography of Bangladesh is unfavourable to them to develop full fledged rivalry with India. Pakistan being on the western side sharing borders with other Islamic nations make it less dependent of India compared to Bangladesh.
 
Any Ranji team will beat the **** out of Bangladeshi team.
Rivalry, my foot.

Pak cs Ban is actually a rivalry as Ban whitewashed Pak in Pak.
Pakistan's real rivals are Afghanistan. They literally get into physical confronation on the field. Also their players reveed up. They never fail to take a dig at how Pakistan treats afghan refugees in post match ceremony.
 
Fantastic post, but I disagree that the 2015 World Cup kicked off whatever this rivalry is - that happened back in 2007.

Also - the umpire in question in 2015 was a Pakistani. I began to question Bangladeshi fans' IQ after they went on a flaming rampage that day.
If only that was the only time they whined about umpiring i would understand. That was probably 100th time lol They whine about umpiring every match. So it was par for the course. They always say "if only that had happened we would have won the cup". I agree they desperately try to do well against India knowing their status. Trying is one thing. But achieving is another things. across the formats their worst W/L ratio was against India followed by SA

Screenshot-2026-01-13-235739.jpg
 
That is exactly what happened with Pakistan cricket in the 90's.
Naah India will never fall as badly as Pakistan or West Indies - simply bcoz Indians have better work ethic and discipline than Pakistanis or West Indies. This is true for Australia & South Africa as well
 
Historically, they have beaten up PAK U-19's much worse in their H2H which is even more impressive considering that every PAK U-19 team member is usually an age fudger.
I never saw bengalis u-19 pumped up against Pakistan but their encounters with India have been filled with abuses being hurled and send offs. India-Bangladesh rivalry has roots.
 
I never saw bengalis u-19 pumped up against Pakistan but their encounters with India have been filled with abuses being hurled and send offs. India-Bangladesh rivalry has roots.
Yep. They are much more in awe of Pakistan's cricket than Afghans are of Indian cricket.

And despite being so submissive, they have a far better record against Pakistan.

All that aggression against India and they still don't have a better record against India.

Won't be a great rivalry- at least not for cricketing reasons :inti
 
Bangladesh head-to-head summary

Opponent: India
Tests. : 0 wins / 15 matches
ODIs : 8 wins / 42 matches
T20Is : 1 win / 17 matches

Opponent: Pakistan
Tests : 2 wins / 15 matches
ODIs : 5 wins / 39 matches
T20Is : 5 wins / 26 matches

Bangladesh's biggest win against India came in the 2007 World Cup. :inti
 
Any Ranji team will beat the **** out of Bangladeshi team.
Rivalry, my foot.

Pak cs Ban is actually a rivalry as Ban whitewashed Pak in Pak.

Bangladesh head-to-head summary

Opponent: India
Tests. : 0 wins / 15 matches
ODIs : 8 wins / 42 matches
T20Is : 1 win / 17 matches

Opponent: Pakistan
Tests : 2 wins / 15 matches
ODIs : 5 wins / 39 matches
T20Is : 5 wins / 26 matches

Bangladesh's biggest win against India came in the 2007 World Cup. :inti
Acha ji? After reading your post, one would think that India has won all the matches against Bangladesh across all formats combined, and that Pakistan has lost all its matches against Bangladesh across all formats combined.

That's exactly why I shared the stats of both teams. As you can see, there isn't much difference, except for the two Test wins. But Bangladesh beating India and knocking them out of the 2007 World Cup more than evens it out. Next time you post, keep in mind that there are people here who are ready to put you in your place. Aajkal tag nahi kar raha tu? :yk :inti
 
It might become a decent rivalry now that Bangladesh have over taken Pakistan on all metrics , atleast in asia India vs Bangladesh shld get decent eye balls.
 
It might become a decent rivalry now that Bangladesh have over taken Pakistan on all metrics , atleast in asia India vs Bangladesh shld get decent eye balls.
Not really Pakistan has lot of raw talent just they need a trigger. They defeated India in champions trophy final with one player triggered.
 
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