2003–04 Bangladeshi cricket season

The 2003–04 Bangladeshi cricket season featured the inaugural Test series in Bangladesh between Bangladesh and England.

International tours

English Cricket team in Bangladesh

England played 2 Test matches and 3 one day internationals (ODI) against Bangladesh. England won both the Test matches and won all three ODIs by 7 wickets.

2004 ICC Under-19 World Cup

During February and March 2004 Bangladesh hosted the 2004 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup. This tournament featured a number of future international players for Bangladesh, including Enamul Haque Jr who ended the tournament as the highest wicket taker.

Domestic competitions

Honours

First-classLimited Overs
National Cricket League ChampionsDhaka DivisionChittagong Division
Most Runs633 - Nuruzzaman (Rajshahi)[1]400 - Masumud Dowla (Chittagong)[2]
Most Wickets63 - Saifullah Khan (Rajshahi)[3]19 - Shabbir Khan (Chittagong)[4]

National Cricket League

TeamPldWLDWFDLFNDPts
Dhaka Division105122042
Sylhet Division105122042
Khulna Division101331224
Rajshahi Division102313124
Chittagong Division101431122
Barisal Division101313220
Barisal Division Chittagong Division Dhaka Division Khulna Division Rajshahi Division Sylhet Division
Barisal Division Match drawn Dhaka
Innings and 25 runs
Match drawn Match drawn Match drawn
Chittagong Division Barisal
3 wickets
Match drawn Match drawn Chittagong
8 wickets
Chittagong
10 wickets
Dhaka Division Dhaka
63 runs
Dhaka
226 runs
Dhaka
5 wickets
Match drawn Match drawn
Khulna Division Match drawn Match drawn Dhaka
152 runs
Rajshahi
6 wickets
Match drawn
Rajshahi Division Match drawn Match drawn Rajshahi
8 wickets
Match drawn Sylhet
13 runs
Sylhet Division Sylhet
9 wickets
Sylhet
124 runs
Match drawn Khulna
76 runs
Sylhet
138 runs
Scorecards

National Cricket One Day League

TeamPldWLNRRPts
Chittagong Division1082-0.06816
Rajshahi Division1073+0.98314
Dhaka Division1055+0.21210
Sylhet Division1046-0.2218
Barisal Division1037-0.3846
Khulna Division1037-0.5256
Barisal Division Chittagong Division Dhaka Division Khulna Division Rajshahi Division Sylhet Division
Barisal Division Chittagong
7 wickets
Barisal
4 wicketrs
Barisal
50 runs
Rajshahi
95 runs
Sylhet
10 runs
Chittagong Division Chittagong
2 wickets
Chittagong
1 runs
Chittagong
14 runs
Chittagong
2 wickets
Chittagong
8 wickets
Dhaka Division Barisal
1 wicket
Dhaka
7 wickets
Dhaka
4 wickets
Dhaka
14 runs
Dhaka
99 runs
Khulna Division Khulna
81 runs
Khulna
13 runs
Dhaka
6 wickets
Rajshahi
167 runs
Khulna
6 wickets
Rajshahi Division Rajshahi
15 runs
Chittagong
6 wickets
Rajshahi
2 wickets
Rajshahi
6 wickets
Rajshahi
52 runs
Sylhet Division Sylhet
6 wickets
Chittagong
8 wickets
Sylhet
105 runs
Sylhet
101 runs
Rajshahi
6 wickets
Scorecards

Other matches

DateTypeMatchResultReport
12 March 2004One DayBangladesh Under-23 v Zimbabwe AZimbabwe A won by 223 wicketsScorecard
17–19 March 20044-Day MatchBangladesh A v Zimbabwe ABangladesh A won by 5 runsScorecard
23–26 March 20044-Day MatchBangladesh A v Zimbabwe ADrawScorecard
28 March 2004One DayBangladesh A v Zimbabwe ABangladesh A won by 2 runsScorecard
30 March 2004One DayBangladesh A v Zimbabwe AZimbabwe A won by 5 wicketsScorecard
2 April 2004One DayBangladesh A v Zimbabwe ABangladesh A won by 60 runsScorecard
5 April 2004One DayBangladesh A v Zimbabwe AZimbabwe A won by 16 runsScorecard
6 April 2004One DayBangladesh A v Zimbabwe ABangladesh A won by 52 runsScorecard

See also

  • History of cricket in Bangladesh

References

External sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.