By ABM Zakirul Haque Titon
Bangladesh cricket stands at a perilous crossroads. Under the leadership of Yunus’s administration, a blind adherence to external pressures—particularly Pakistan’s political and cricketing influence—has led the national team into a trajectory of systemic decline. This reality can no longer be ignored. Decisions driven by imitation, political impulse, and overconfidence have plunged our cricket into confusion, leadership vacuums, and a deep crisis of trust.
The notion of competing with India may sound appealing as a slogan, but in practice, such rivalry demands a long-term roadmap: a strong domestic structure, modernised training facilities, science-driven player development, and above all, competent and patriotic leadership. Under Yunus’s tenure, none of these essential elements have materialised. Instead, we have witnessed unplanned policies, administrative chaos, abuse of power, arbitrary decision-making, and repeated on-field humiliations.
Bangladesh cricket’s history demonstrates that the sport never advances through slogans or political posturing. Progress has always relied on hard work, patience, continuity in domestic competitions, and the optimal use of limited resources. Deviating from this proven path to accommodate foreign political signals is not merely irresponsible—it is a betrayal of Bangladesh’s cricketing interests.
Cricket is not a tool for showcasing power; it is a nation’s emotion, its dreams, and its potential. Today, that symbol is being systematically undermined—through administrative incompetence, nepotism, and the manipulation of vested intermediaries. The consequences are obvious: a fractured cricketing structure, insecure player futures, lifeless domestic competitions, and a disillusioned audience.
Even more disheartening is the silence of those in power amidst this destruction. The Yunus administration cannot evade responsibility. The era of avoiding accountability is over; it is now time to demand answers and assign responsibility.
Adviser Asif Nazrul speaks of ethics and reform, yet his role in this cricketing catastrophe is far from beyond scrutiny. When the administration succumbs to intermediaries, nepotism, and gross mismanagement, a responsible adviser’s silence becomes complicit in the wrongdoing. True responsibility requires intervention, reform, and, if necessary, tough decisions. Where such action is impossible, resignation becomes the minimum ethical requirement.
Key Failures of Bangladesh Cricket Administration Under Yunus
| Area | Observed Failures | Consequences |
|---|---|---|
| Leadership & Governance | Arbitrary decisions, lack of accountability | Leadership vacuums, poor team morale |
| Domestic Structure | Neglect of local leagues and player development | Weak talent pipeline |
| International Strategy | Blind imitation of external influences | Misaligned priorities, repeated defeats |
| Training & Development | Outdated coaching, no science-based plans | Skill stagnation, inconsistent performance |
| Oversight & Ethics | Adviser inaction, tolerance of nepotism | Corruption, systemic decay |
To safeguard Bangladesh cricket, it is no longer a political demand but a moral and historical imperative that Asif Nazrul steps aside. The future of our national sport—and the dreams of millions—depends upon accountability, courage, and ethical leadership.
Author: Editor & Publisher
