There was a time when Mirpur victories were scripted through attrition. Bangladesh would suffocate opponents slowly, relying on crumbling surfaces, patient spin, and survival instincts sharpened by years of hardship in Test cricket. Pace, particularly hostile pace, belonged to someone else’s mythology to Pakistan, Australia, South Africa. Bangladesh were expected to endure it, not unleash it.
That is why this victory over Pakistan felt historically different.
Bangladesh’s 104-run triumph in the opening Test at Mirpur was not merely another home win. It was the clearest declaration yet that the country’s cricketing identity is evolving. And at the centre of that transformation stood Nahid Rana, a fast bowler who turned the final afternoon into a theatre of intimidation, reverse swing, and psychological collapse.
His match-winning second spell read like a fast bowler’s manifesto: 4.5 overs, two maidens, 10 runs, four wickets. But numbers alone cannot capture what Rana truly represented. This was not simply about wickets. It was about Bangladesh discovering that they, too, could dictate fear.
The final day had unfolded like a pendulum. Bangladesh resumed on 152 for three before Najmul Hossain Shanto made the defining strategic call of the Test: declaring at 240 for nine and setting Pakistan 268 to chase. Historically, the target appeared beyond reach at Mirpur, where no side had successfully hunted down more than 209 in the fourth innings. Yet Pakistan’s response unsettled the old certainties.
Debutant Abdullah Fazal batted with composure beyond his years. Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan rebuilt steadily. At 152 for five, Pakistan still required only 116 more runs with enough overs remaining for every possible result to remain alive. The familiar anxiety of a late Bangladesh collapse lingered over the stadium.
That was the moment Shanto gambled on Rana again.
It was not an obvious decision. Rana had suffered in the first innings, conceding 104 runs for a solitary wicket, and his opening spell in the chase lacked rhythm. But Shanto sensed something beyond the scorebook. Great captains often recognise emotional momentum before statistical evidence confirms it.
Rana justified that instinct immediately.
First came Saud Shakeel’s edge behind the wicket. Then arrived the delivery that may ultimately define this Test, and perhaps symbolise the new Bangladesh.
At 147.2 kilometres per hour, the old ball tailed inward viciously toward Mohammad Rizwan. Pakistan’s most dependable batter shouldered arms, convinced the line was safe. A second later, the stumps exploded behind him. Rizwan froze in disbelief. Mirpur erupted.
It was the kind of delivery traditionally associated with Pakistan’s own fast-bowling folklore - reverse swing delivered at frightening pace, late enough to defeat both judgment and technique. Bangladesh had spent decades confronting such moments from visiting teams. This time, they were the authors of it.
Shanto himself admitted afterward that even he and wicketkeeper Litton Das were surprised by the amount of movement Rana generated with the old ball. That surprise mattered. It revealed a skill still developing, still evolving, and therefore perhaps even more dangerous.
Pakistan never recovered. Their final five wickets disappeared for just 11 runs as Rana, Taskin Ahmed, and Taijul Islam ripped through the lower order with relentless intensity. Rana finished with career-best figures of 5 for 40, becoming only the second Bangladesh pacer to claim a five-wicket haul in a home Test.
Yet the larger significance lay beyond the scorecard.
For years, Bangladesh’s progress in Test cricket has been measured through resilience, the ability to compete abroad, survive pressure, and occasionally exploit home conditions. But elite Test teams are not remembered merely for resistance. They are remembered for imposing themselves physically and psychologically on opponents.
This Bangladesh side is beginning to do exactly that.
The duel between Rana and Shaheen Shah Afridi throughout the Test carried symbolic weight. There were bouncers exchanged, confrontations embraced, intimidation answered with intimidation. Bangladesh no longer appeared content with playing the role of the reactive underdog. They looked like a side increasingly willing to impose violence on the contest itself.
That mentality shift may be Shanto’s greatest achievement as captain.
His declaration on the fifth morning reflected belief in a pace attack capable of manufacturing victory rather than merely defending against defeat. Older Bangladesh sides may have batted longer, played safer, and protected the draw. This team sensed vulnerability and attacked it.
That aggression is not accidental. Rana’s emergence, alongside Taskin Ahmed’s maturity and the continued development of Bangladesh’s quicks, has fundamentally altered the tactical possibilities available to the team. Seven wickets in the fourth innings fell to pace on a traditionally spin-dominated Mirpur surface. That alone tells the story of transition.
And for Pakistan, Rana is rapidly becoming an unavoidable nightmare. After tormenting them in Rawalpindi during Bangladesh’s historic 2024 series triumph and dominating again in Mirpur, he now represents a recurring disruption to Pakistan’s traditional supremacy in Asian fast bowling.
In many ways, this victory was about more than two World Test Championship points. Bangladesh did not simply defeat Pakistan. They dismantled an old perception about themselves.
For decades, Bangladesh cricket sought respectability. In Mirpur, they pursued something else entirely: authority.
And in Nahid Rana, they may finally have found the kind of fast bowler capable of giving it to them.

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