Pakistan National Cricket Team Vs Bangladesh National Cricket Team Match Scorecard: Bangladesh’s 114-all-out rout versus Pakistan’s 1999 benchmark

Pakistan National Cricket Team Vs Bangladesh National Cricket Team Match Scorecard: Bangladesh’s 114-all-out rout versus Pakistan’s 1999 benchmark

The pakistan national cricket team vs bangladesh national cricket team match scorecard from Mirpur captures two reference points at once: Pakistan’s collapse to 114 in the opening ODI, and the older benchmark of 161 from the 1999 World Cup that previously stood as their lowest ODI total against Bangladesh. Put side by side, the comparison answers a narrower question than a simple win-loss recap: how much more complete was Bangladesh’s control in this new low?

Mirpur: Nahid Rana’s 5-24 drives Pakistan to 114 in 30. 4 overs

Bangladesh’s eight-wicket win in Wednesday’s 50-over contest in Mirpur began with a bowling performance that reduced Pakistan to their lowest ODI total against Bangladesh: 114 all out in 30. 4 overs. Pace bowler Nahid Rana led that effort with 5-24, completing his first five-wicket haul in one-day internationals and doing it in a seven-over spell.

Rana’s impact came early and repeatedly. He dismissed Sahibzada Farhan, Shamyl Hussain, Maaz Sadaqat, Mohammad Rizwan and Salman Agha, leaving Pakistan 69-5 after he removed the top five batters. Captain Mehidy Hasan Miraz added sustained pressure through the middle with 3-29 off his off-spin, while Taskin Ahmed and Mustafizur Rahman took one wicket each.

Pakistan’s one notable stand against the collapse came from number eight Faheem Ashraf, who made 37 before being dismissed by Mustafizur. Even with that brief resistance, the innings ended well short of a competitive total in a 50-over format.

Bangladesh’s chase: 115 in 15. 1 overs with Tanzid Hasan 67 not out

Bangladesh’s reply reinforced how one-sided the contest became once the target was set. Chasing 115, the batting group completed the job in 15. 1 overs to secure the eight-wicket win and a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

Opener Tanzid Hasan made the chase look routine, hammering an unbeaten 67 off 42 balls. He also anchored the game’s defining partnership: an 82-run stand for the second wicket with Najmul Hossain Shanto, who scored 27. Saif Hassan fell early for four, but Litton Das remained unbeaten on three alongside Tanzid as Bangladesh reached the target.

That pace of scoring, combined with the limited wickets lost, meant Pakistan were not only beaten; they were kept out of the contest for most of the afternoon once the chase began.

Nahid Rana’s breakthrough vs Pakistan’s 1999 low: what the new record shows

The headline statistic in the pakistan national cricket team vs bangladesh national cricket team match scorecard is the new low of 114, and the context provides the comparison point: the previous lowest ODI total by Pakistan against Bangladesh was 161 during the 1999 World Cup. The new figure eclipses that older mark, but the more revealing contrast is the combined shape of the defeat: a rapid dismissal followed by an even faster chase.

Comparison point 114 all out in Mirpur 161 in 1999 World Cup
Pakistan’s lowest ODI total vs Bangladesh 114 (new lowest) 161 (previous lowest)
Bangladesh result in the match tied to the low total Eight-wicket win Not stated in the context
Bangladesh chase Overhauled in 15. 1 overs Not stated in the context
Lead bowler’s figures Nahid Rana 5-24 Not stated in the context
Notable batting anchor in the chase Tanzid Hasan 67 not out (42 balls) Not stated in the context

Analysis: the comparison suggests Bangladesh’s current win was not only about setting a new low total for Pakistan; it also paired that low with a chase that ended the contest quickly, indicating control across both innings. The context underlines that control through individual milestones: Rana became the first Bangladeshi bowler to dismiss the opposition’s top five batters in an ODI innings, and his spell marked a breakthrough after a modest start to his ODI career.

The same match also placed Rana in a narrower historical lane: he is only the second Bangladeshi bowler to take a five-wicket haul against Pakistan in ODIs, after Mustafizur Rahman’s 5-75 during the 2019 World Cup. Yet, the 5-24 in Mirpur came with a decisive team result and a series-opening advantage.

Bangladesh now lead the three-match series 1-0 after the Mirpur win. If Bangladesh maintain the combination of early wickets and a short chase, the comparison with the 1999 benchmark suggests Pakistan’s new record low will be less a one-off anomaly and more a warning sign for the remaining matches in this series.