Sarkar, Saif carry Bangladesh to series victory over West Indies
The visitors lasted only 30.1 overs in Dhaka, getting bowled out for 117 in a chase of 297
Mohammad Isam
23-Oct-2025 • Updated 2 hrs ago
Saif Hassan and Soumya Sarkar put on the second-biggest opening stand for Bangladesh in ODIs • AFP/Getty Images
Bangladesh 296 for 8 (Sarkar 91, Saif 80, Hosein 4-41) beat West Indies 117 (Hosein 27, Nasum 3-11, Rishad 3-54) by 179 runs
Bangladesh blazed a hole through West Indies in a 179-run win in the third ODI, achieving their first series victory since March last year. Saif Hassan and Soumya Sarkar put together a scintillating 176-run opening stand which provided the backbone for Bangladesh's 296 for 8. The visitors lasted 30.1 overs, getting bowled out for 117 in reply.
Rishad Hossain claimed three wickets to take his series haul to 12, becoming the first Bangladesh bowler since 2015 to take more than ten wickets in a bilateral ODI series. Nasum Ahmed also picked up three wickets while Tanvir Islam finished with 8-0-16-2.
Bangladesh got off to a fast start, unusual for this series as it was played on mostly dark, cracked, spin-dominated pitches. Sarkar (91 off 86) and Saif (80 off 72) went on a boundary spree that lasted 25 overs. The two stylish batters matched each other stroke for stroke as they raised Bangladesh's second-highest opening partnership in ODIs and the first century opening stand at the Shere Bangla National Stadium in ten years..
Saif struck Akeal Hosein for two fours in the first over, followed by his first six in the left-arm spinner's next over. That inside-out strike over the covers set off the big-hitting spree. Sarkar struck Roston Chase for two sixes, both reverse-hits early in the innings. Saif focused on hitting straight, blazing Chase for his second six before he overturned an on-field lbw decision when he was on 28 and extended his innings.
Justin Greaves broke a sequence of 59 consecutive overs of spin from West Indies, across two matches, and Sarkar welcomed him two fours through fine leg. Saif, then, played the shot of the innings. He charged Greaves who tried to cramp him, but the batter backed himself and the result was a lovely high-elbow loft that went for a big six down the ground.
Saif struck two boundaries in the 16th over, one bringing up Bangladesh's 100-run opening stand, and the next one taking him to his maiden fifty. Sarkar wasn't done at the other end. He slammed Khary Pierre for a straight six before he went after Motie with a six and four in the 25th over. Just like that he was into the nineties.
Chase ended the opening stand in the 26th over when he had Saif caught at long-on. Sarkar was left distraught when he also holed out in the deep, at midwicket, nine short of his fourth ODI ton.
The rest of the Bangladesh batters couldn't quite do justice to the Saif-Sarkar double act. Najmul Hossain Shanto and Towhid Hridoy added 50 runs for the third wicket. Alick Athanaze took a tremendous catch to remove Shanto, running back from his bowling mark before diving full length.
West Indies had a bit of respite when Hosein removed Mahidul Islam, Rishad and Nasum, all in the 46th over. Still, Bangladesh's 296 - which included a record-equalling 14 sixes - looked like a formidable total on the Dhaka surface.
West Indies never got their chase going, as they ran into Nasum who took their first three wickets. Athanaze fell lbw trying to paddle Nasum in the fifth over, before Ackeem Auguste, playing a similar shot, also fell lbw for a duck.
Brandon King, who struck a six and two fours, was Nasum's third wicket, bowled for 18. Shai Hope fell for just 4, mishitting Tanvir Islam in the 14th over. Sherfane Rutherford became Rishad's first wicket, when he inside-edged one to Mehidy Hasan Miraz at midwicket, having made 12. He had a particularly poor ODI series.
West Indies' lower half caved in steadily. Rishad bowled a full toss and had Chase out for a duck, before trapping Gudakesh Motie for his third. After winning the first ODI and losing the second in a Super Over, the emphatic victory in the third match sealed the series 2-1 for Bangladesh.
Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84