The Shakib saga: All you wanted to know, or didn't
Is Shakib at fault or is it the BCB? What's all the toing-and-froing really about? Who gains? Who loses?
Where do I begin? TL;DR: it's Shakib vs BCB and, somehow, Shakib vs Shakib.
We go back to February 28 then. BCB president Nazmul Hassan, we call him Papon bhai here in Bangladesh, instructed Shakib to tour South Africa in March. This was after Shakib had, apparently, told the BCB that he wanted some time off from Test cricket.
You're right, it has happened before. Shakib has missed a number of tours in the last five years. He skipped Tests in South Africa and Sri Lanka while also missing out on four tours because of suspensions and injuries. After he skipped Bangladesh's New Zealand tour in January, many people did expect him to skip South Africa too. Then, when he wasn't picked in the IPL auction…
If you let me finish… When he wasn't picked in the IPL auction, it was then assumed he would be available for the tour. But Shakib said that he wasn't physically and mentally fit to play.
It's not that straightforward. Before the auction took place, Shakib made himself available for the IPL during the Test phase of the South Africa tour. Since the BCB had approved of that plan, Shakib can't be faulted for assuming he could go ahead with his plans. And, really, his performances have earned him the ticket to ask for a break: he is one of the finest allrounders in the world, after all. He has numbers that debunk the theory that he's not committed to Bangladesh cricket. It's also worth noting though that Shakib's family lives in the US, which means that every time he gets a break, a week goes into travelling and all of that.
How long do you have? But, seriously, it can't be denied that Shakib has had run-ins with the BCB for a long time. Let me go back… In 2009, he challenged the then board president AHM Mustafa Kamal for criticising the Bangladesh team in a public function. He's been banned twice on disciplinary grounds. And remember how he kicked the stumps during a domestic T20 game last year? I might be missing a couple of instances, but you get the picture.
Not really. The BCB has actually handled Shakib poorly in the last 12 years. See, he is Bangladesh's greatest cricketer ever, there's no contest there. So the BCB avoids punishing him too harshly, as was in 2010 when he abused someone in the crowd for not moving away from the sightscreen, or when he flipped a fan during the 2011 World Cup. They reduced his ban when he threatened to quit the Bangladesh team as he wasn't allowed to play in the CPL. When the ICC banned him in 2019, the board didn't even announce an internal investigation.
If he can change his mind about touring South Africa twice, you think anyone can stop Shakib from picking and choosing the games he plays?
He generally gets along with his team-mates, but he will face a confused team management that had probably activated Plan B when they heard he was on leave.
But Shakib still needs Bangladesh, especially now when it looks like the IPL is unlikely to feature in his schedule at all. Given his age, he has a few good years left in him, but he would want to go out on a high. And, for that, he will need to perform for Bangladesh.
Until the next time, Bangladesh have a Test tour, perhaps.
Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84