Feature

Jaker Ali's captaincy, Afghanistan's newbies in focus ahead of T20Is

Bangladesh recently beat Afghanistan in the Asia Cup, but they still have plenty of work to do with their batting

Mohammad Isam
Mohammad Isam
01-Oct-2025 • 1 hr ago
Tanzid Hasan made a rapid half-century, Bangladesh vs Afghanistan, Men's T20 Asia Cup, Abu Dhabi, September 16, 2025

Bangladesh and Afghanistan will use this bilateral series to tune up for the T20 World Cup next year  •  Associated Press

Bangladesh will face Afghanistan in a three-match T20I series in Sharjah from October 2. Here are five things to watch out for.

Bangladesh under new leadership

Jaker Ali will captain Bangladesh in the absence of Litton Das, who has been ruled out of the series with a side strain. Jaker had also led Bangladesh in two matches in the Asia Cup, when Litton wasn't fit, with Bangladesh losing both games. Before leading Bangladesh in the Asia Cup, Jaker had not captained at any level - domestic or Under-19. In those two matches in the Asia Cup, against India and Pakistan, Jaker managed scores of only 4 and 5, respectively.
There seems to be dearth of leadership options in Bangladesh's T20I side, especially after the BCB discontinued with Mahedi Hasan as vice-captain after the UAE series in May.
Senior fast bowler Taskin Ahmed might have been a leadership option, but he probably missed out because of workload management. There will be scrutiny on how Jaker juggles captaincy, wicketkeeping and batting against Afghanistan. Bangladesh have the option of reducing his load by handing the wicketkeeping duties to Nurul Hasan.

Bangladesh need to find the balance

Bangladesh have finally understood the value of sixes in T20 cricket, but are they going too hard? They need to blend their six-hitting with strike rotation to make their batting work in the format. Against Pakistan, with a spot in the Asia Cup final at stake, they kept going for sixes and kept finding the boundary riders on the Dubai pitch that perhaps wasn't conducive to that style of play.
Bangladesh, though, had found the balance against Sri Lanka, when they chased 169, with Saif Hassan and Towhid Hridoy scoring half-centuries. Bangladesh also tend to fare better in bilateral series, and recently, they also beat Afghanistan in the Asia Cup.

Afghanistan's big selection calls

After failing to qualify for the Super Fours in the Asia Cup, Afghanistan have rung in the changes, leaving out Gulbadin Naib, Karim Janat and Fazalhaq Farooqi for both the T20Is and ODIs against Bangladesh in the UAE.
Janat has managed only 68 runs in eight T20I innings this year, and hasn't done much with the ball either. Naib, too, has slipped down the pecking order. Mystery spinner AM Ghazanfar is also not part of the main squad, but has been named as a reserve. Ghazanfar, however, has made the ODI squad.
But watch out for the uncapped pair of Wafiullah Tarakhil and Bashir Ahmad. Bashir is a tall left-arm seamer, who could be a like-for-like replacement for Farooqi, while Tarakhil has been rewarded for his strong domestic form. In the 2025 Shpageeza Cricket League, Tarakhil emerged as the third-highest scorer, with 298 runs in nine innings at an average of 37.25 and a strike rate of 155.20.

Spin is king

Despite the changes, Afghanistan have immense spin-bowling depth in their T20I side, with Rashid Khan the leader of the attack, of course. Legspinner Rishad Hossain's emergence has given Bangladesh's attack a potent point of difference, but Afghanistan's spinners have a better strike rate, economy rate and average than Bangladesh's in T20Is since 2020. The battle between the two spin attacks could be a mouth-watering one.

Afghanistan's home venue

Afghanistan have won 20 of the 30 T20Is they have played in Sharjah. They have won 14 out of 18 games batting first there, including the last six outings when they batted first. On the other hand, Bangladesh have won only one out of six T20Is in Sharjah. The severe heat in Sharjah will test the fitness of the players.

Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84