Bangladesh, Netherlands look to iron out wrinkles in Sylhet
From comebacks to spin questions, Litton Das and Scott Edwards eye answers before bigger competitions around the corner
Abhijato Sensarma
29-Aug-2025 • 12 hrs ago
Litton Das' Bangladesh will use these games to up their Asia Cup and World Cup prep • AFP/Getty Images
Bangladesh and Netherlands were not scheduled to add to their tally of five T20I face-offs, but after India's tour was postponed, Bangladesh were on the lookout to fill up the space on their home calendar. A tour was soon announced: Netherlands to play three T20Is in Sylhet starting August 30. Netherlands, however, will intend to show they are on this tour to more than just make up the numbers.
Litmus test for skipper Litton
While the T20 World Cup early next year remains a focus for Bangladesh, it is some way down the horizon. They will be looking at this series to tighten their own line-up for the more immediate T20 Asia Cup, set to begin on September 9 in the UAE.
That tournament will be the first major assignment for captain Litton Das, in charge of the T20I side since earlier this year. He has already shepherded them to their maiden T20I series wins against Sri Lanka and Pakistan, and will be expected to extend the winning streak before the Asia Cup.
Nurul Hasan has been in the middle of a purple patch in T20s•GSL/Getty Images
Bangladesh's comeback men
The series is also a storyof comebacks on both sides. Bangladesh have recalled wicketkeeper-batter Nurul Hasan and top-order batter Saif Hassan, both of whom last played for Bangladesh over two years ago.
Nurul has accumulated 514 runs in the 2024-25 season across T20 leagues, and also led Rangpur Riders to the inaugural Global Super League title in 2024. Saif, meanwhile, struck a couple of impressive half-centuries at the recent Top End T20s in Australia. They will be looking to push for spots in the first XI.
Scott Edwards will be without two of his key allrounders from the Europe qualifiers•Matthew Lewis/ICC/Getty Images
Unfamiliar territory for Netherlands
They won the Europe qualifier for the 2026 T20 World Cup earlier this year, but were set to play in subcontinental conditions only when they landed in India for the World Cup next year. Game time in the region has been rare for them. In Bangladesh, too, they have only ever played once before, way back in the 2014 T20 World Cup.
The pitches in Bangladesh have made for lower-scoring encounters than the ones in India in the recent past. Nonetheless, this tour will allow Netherlands to start figuring out their best combination on surfaces quite different to the ones they played on to win the Europe qualifiers.
Bas de Leede misses this tour but should be back for the World Cup•AFP/Getty Images
Netherlands are without their stars
A couple of spots in Netherlands' eventual World Cup squad might be reserved for two of their top allrounders - Bas de Leede and Roelof van der Merwe - who could not make it to this tour because of their County commitments. Both played major roles in the Europe qualifiers. But left-hand opener Vikramjit Singh (dropped for the qualifiers), right-arm quick Sebastiaan Braat (last played in 2021), and allrounder Sikander Zulfiqar (in 2019) will be looking to back up their recent domestic numbers as they fill up the vacant spots.
In unfamiliar conditions, a lot of the responsibility for leading the side might fall on the shoulders of their captain and middle-order lynchpin, Scott Edwards.
Rishad Hossain's form has dipped of late•AFP/Getty Images
Spin headache for Bangladesh
Bangladesh will be less than thrilled with their incumbents in the spin department. While their pacers have been impressive on their way to 51 wickets in T20Is in 2025 - 60.71% of all wickets they have taken this year - their spinners have had uneven returns.
After a spell out of the XI, Mahedi Hasan made a comeback in the final T20I against Sri Lanka, and took 4 for 11 to bowl them to victory. His numbers were less remarkable in the series against Pakistan, where he took just three wickets at an average of 32.66 and an economy of 8.90.
Rishad Hossain, the legspinner who is also a handy bat, has not been as potent either in 2025 with an average of 32.70 and an economy of 8.75.
With the only other bowler who bowls spin in the side being Nasum Ahmed, who hasn't played T20Is this year, Bangladesh will be hoping the spinners up their game if they are to mount a serious title challenge in the Asia Cup or next year's T20 World Cup.
Abhijato Sensarma is a sub-editor