Mainul Haque

Mainul Haque, commonly known as Mainu, was a Bangladeshi cricketer who played for the Bangladesh side in the famous cricket match against the MCC at Dhaka in 1976–77. In the following season, against Sri Lanka he acted as the Vice Captain of the side, helping Raquibul Hasan. A right-handed middle-order batter, he scored 39 at Faridpur and 43 at Chittagong against Sri Lanka . In February 1978, he shared a century partnership with Raquibul Hasan against the touring Decan Blues side from India.[1]

1st Class career

An early retirement

Mainul went abroad immediately after the 1978 season, thus abruptly ending his international career. The main reason behind his decision was that Bangladesh cricket at the time was very much at the amateur stage. Even the top cricketers were poorly paid. All of them were involved in other professional activities. Apart from Mainu, a number of other national cricketers (Nazrul Kader Lintu, Nazim Shiraji, Asadduzzaman Misha, Nehal Hasnain, just to name a few) gave their careers greater importance over cricket.[2]

Domestic cricket

He played most of his domestic cricket with the Mohammedan Sporting Club of Dhaka.

Relatives

His elder brother Selim was a member of the Bangladesh cricket team that took part in the 1979 ICC Trophy in England.[3]

gollark: I'm looking at a 16-core thing going cheaply on eBay, not that I'm using 4 very much.
gollark: Two cores are enough for anyone.
gollark: Genius.
gollark: If you're not running much sticking more CPU in won't help.
gollark: WhyNot™

See also

  • Marylebone Cricket Club cricket team in Bangladesh in 1976-77
  • Sri Lankan cricket team in Bangladesh in 1977-78

References

  1. Hasan Babli. "Antorjartik Crickete Bangladesh". Khelar Bhuban Prakashani, November 1994.
  2. Ameer, Rafiqul (12 May 2006). "Looking Back: Bangladesh Cricket in the 80's". Star Weekend Magazine. Archived from the original on 2012-02-22. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  3. BanglaCricket: Bangladesh in ICC Trophy, ICC Trophy 1979, Englands Archived 2008-07-24 at the Wayback Machine (Retrieved on 2008-9-29)


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