He stood in five games in the men’s ODI World Cup last year, and last month became only the second umpire from his country to officiate in a neutral Test

Mohammad Isam01-Feb-2024Be honest and admit that Shakib Al Hasan kung-fu-kicking stumps comes to mind every time you hear the phrase “Bangladeshi umpire”.Shakib has often screamed at them. Charged at them with the bat held high over his head like an axe. Charged at them wearing flip-flops. The former Bangladesh captain has made the country’s umpires part of cricket’s pop-culture lexicon – giving weight to the notion of them as a hapless, bumbling breed, somewhat like WWE referees.Enter Sharfuddoula Ibn Shahid. When the slim, genial umpire stood in last week’s blockbuster Brisbane Test match, it was just the second time a Bangladeshi had officiated as a neutral umpire in a Test.Sharfuddoula had a good match in Brisbane. He was also an on-field umpire in five World Cup matches in India last year, the first from Bangladesh in the tournament’s history. He was also the first from the country to officiate in both formats of the women’s World Cups.But set his recent high-profile assignments aside and Bangladesh’s umpiring record on the international stage is quite thin. Masudur Rahman stood in the Asia Cup final couple of years ago. Former international player Enamul Haque was the first Bangladeshi to officiate as a neutral umpire in a Test match, in 2012. The late Nadir Shah stood in an India-Pakistan final in a 2008 tri-series.Bangladesh’s umpires, however, have been in the news off and on for various scandals and controversies, and for making glaring errors. A few years ago when there were allegations of umpires being used to manipulate domestic limited-overs matches. Things came to a head in ugly fashion with Shakib kicking down the stumps in a Dhaka Premier League game in 2021 after being refused an lbw decision.Bangladesh hasn’t exactly been a country that has produced top-shelf umpires and match referees. The ICC has never been confident enough in their quality to hand them neutral umpiring assignments, and so they have usually only got home ODIs. The BCB for its part has never taken umpiring seriously enough to develop a pathway for umpires to come up through.Sharfuddoula (right) with Indian colleague Nitin Menon at a 2023 ODI World Cup warm-up game•Matt Roberts/ICC/GettyIf you consider the extreme, in-your-face pressure the average Bangladeshi umpire has to endure in domestic leagues, particularly the DPL, you would think they would be well equipped to handle top-level pressure too. Given the right training and international experience, they could well have done far better than they have. But as things stand, Sharfuddoula remains the lone flag-bearer for Bangladeshi umpiring on the world stage.A former left-arm spinner who played for Bangladesh in the ICC Trophy in 1994, where he took six wickets in three matches, Sharfuddoula spent a brief time working as a coach, and then joined the BCB in an administrative role. He umpired his first domestic game in 2007, and his international debut came soon after, when he stood alongside Simon Taufel in a Bangladesh-Sri Lanka ODI in 2010He had to wait 11 years to stand in a Test match – that opportunity came due to Covid 19, which forced the ICC to appoint Bangladeshi umpires for home Tests for a while. Sharfuddoula spent the intervening years on a diet of domestic first-class, List-A and T20 matches. He also umpired Associate ODIs and stood in the men’s World Cup Qualifiers (ODIs and T20Is) in 2018 and 2019.He officiated in the women’s ODI World Cups in 2017 and 2022, and the women’s T20 World Cup in the West Indies in 2018, apart from several women’s T20I World Cup qualifiers, starting in 2013. He also stood in the men’s Under-19 World Cups in 2016 and 2020. Still, though he had a fair amount of white-ball experience, before his 2023 World Cup appearance he had made only a handful of appearances as a neutral umpire in ODIs or T20Is where both teams were from Full Member nations. And before his umpiring Test debut in 2021, his only times standing in first-class cricket overseas were from some matches in West Indies’ regional competition in 2016, and in a handful of Associate first-class games.