Key Points

Bangladesh Test captain Najmul Hossain Shanto has made a surprising decision to step down from his role after the recent series defeat in Sri Lanka. He emphasized that his choice is strategic and aimed at the team's development, not driven by personal disappointment. Shanto believes having three different captains across formats could be challenging for the team's cohesion. His captaincy record includes four wins in 14 Tests, with notable victories in Pakistan, and he maintained a higher batting average while leading the side.

Key Points: Najmul Shanto Quits Bangladesh Test Captaincy After Sri Lanka Series

  • Shanto steps down voluntarily after 14 Tests as captain
  • Wins four matches including historic Pakistan series
  • Averaged 36.24 as Test skipper
  • Supports potential leadership consolidation
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Najmul Hossain Shanto steps down as Bangladesh Test captain for team's 'betterment' after Sri Lanka defeat

Bangladesh captain Najmul Hossain Shanto steps down for team's betterment after series defeat, citing challenges of multi-format leadership

"I don't want to continue in the Test format anymore. This is for the betterment of the team. - Najmul Hossain Shanto"

Colombo, June 28

Najmul Hossain Shanto has announced his decision to step down as Bangladesh's Test captain following the team's 1-0 series defeat in Sri Lanka, where they lost the second Test by an innings and 78 runs in Colombo.

Speaking at the post-match press conference, Shanto said his decision was made with the team's future in mind, rather than being driven by personal disappointment.

"I don't want to continue (as captain) in the Test format anymore," Shanto said. "This is not personal. I have taken the decision for the betterment of the team. I think this will help the team. I have been a part of the dressing room for the past few years. I think three captains (for the three international formats) is not sensible. I don't know what the board will feel about this, and I will support their decision. But this is my personal decision. I think three separate captains will be difficult for the team to deal with."

Shanto stressed that the decision should not be seen as emotional or as a reaction to the recent series loss. "I would want that no one feels this decision is emotional, or that I am disappointed by something. I want to make this clear. This is for the betterment of the team."

He revealed that he had communicated his intention to the Bangladesh Cricket Board's cricket operations department "some days back".

Shanto had already been replaced as ODI captain earlier this month, with Mehidy Hasan Miraz taking over that role.

Shanto's tenure as Test captain began in November 2023 during the home series against New Zealand. In 14 Tests at the helm, Bangladesh won four - including two historic wins in Pakistan in August 2024 - lost nine, and drew one.

Despite the mixed results, Shanto's personal form flourished as captain - he averaged 36.24 in Tests as skipper, compared to 29.83 when not leading the side. In the four Tests that Bangladesh won under his leadership, he scored at an average of 37.16.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As an Indian cricket fan, I feel Bangladesh needs stability. Look at how Rohit Sharma led India across formats before passing the torch. Shanto's batting improved as captain - why not give him more time?
R
Rohit P
Bangladesh cricket needs to learn from India's transition phase. We had Kohli-Rohit split captaincy working well. Shanto's decision seems too hasty after just 14 Tests. BCB should convince him to stay!
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Sarah B
Interesting perspective from Shanto. In India we've seen split captaincy work (Dhoni-Kohli transition), but maybe Bangladesh's bench strength isn't deep enough for this model yet. Thoughts?
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Vikram M
Shanto's stats as captain are actually decent for Bangladesh standards. That win in Pakistan was historic! BCB should back him instead of changing captains like musical chairs. Bangladesh needs continuity.
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Kavya N
While I appreciate Shanto's team-first attitude, this seems like BCB mismanagement. First they remove him from ODIs, now this. No wonder Bangladesh cricket struggles to find stability. Indian board handles transitions much better.
M
Michael C
As a neutral observer, Shanto's batting average improvement as captain (36 vs 29) shows he thrived under pressure. Maybe BCB should reconsider - good

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