Profile
If you google "Mushfiqur Rahman", you get a bunch of results about Mushfiqur Rahim instead. Once you sift through them, you'll find enough information to deduce that Rahman was Rajshahi's second-ever Test cricketer, and that he was a personal favourite of Dav Whatmore's.
Unfortunately, he wasn't able to back up his coach's faith with any significant on-field results. Although he made his Test debut batting at number eight and bowling second-change, he was swiftly promoted into the top six of the batting order, and sometimes even entrusted with the new ball. This is more a reflection of the lack of value ascribed to seam bowling by Bangladeshi selectors as anything else, because although Cricinfo charitably describes him as "fast-medium" (less of the fast, more of the medium), his profile more accurately describes him as "guileless but accurate".
His batting never really offered anything at the highest level: at his best, he eked out a couple of painful 30+ scores against England at less than two an over from the top six; at his worst, he managed successive scores of 0, 0, 1, 0, 22 and 0. Ultimately though, he simply wasn't an international class player.
Statistics
TESTS - 232 runs @ 13.64 (best 46*) and 13 wickets @ 63.30 (best 4/65) in 10 matches
FIRST CLASS - 2,448 runs @ 25.50 (1 century, best 115) and 133 wickets @ 28.20 (3 5WI, best 5/40) in 66 matches
Role in the Team
In his least-worst ever Test match, Mushfiqur Rahman batted at six and opened the bowling. It seems only fair that this is his role in my team.
Aislabie's XI so far:
1. Monkey Hornby (Pick #40, 3 caps)
2.
3. Matt Poore (Pick #1, 14 caps)
4. Floyd Reifer (Pick #16, 6 caps)
5.
6. Mushfiqur Rahman (Pick #54, 10 caps)
7. Khaled Mashud (Pick #25, 44 caps)
8. Andy Whittall (Pick #41, 10 caps)
9. Walter Giffen (Pick #24, 3 caps)
10.
11.
(90/100 caps so far)
Next pick:
@blockerdave
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