The Bangladesh men's public cricket crew (Bengali: বাংলাদেশ জাতীয় ক্রিকেট দল), prominently known as The Tigers, is regulated by the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB).
It is a Full Member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) with Test, One-Day International (ODI) and T20 International (T20I) status. It played its most memorable Test coordinate in November 2000 against India with a 9 wicket misfortune in Dhaka, turning into the 10th Test-playing country. Bangladesh turned into a partner individual from the ICC in 1977, and contended in six ICC Trophies, the main ODI rivalry for non-Test playing countries. Bangladesh's initial authority introduction to worldwide cricket came in the 1979 ICC Trophy in England. On 31 March 1986, Bangladesh played its most memorable ODI match, against Pakistan in the Asia Cup. For quite a while, football was the most well known sport in Bangladesh, however cricket continuously turned out to be extremely famous - especially in metropolitan regions - and by the last part of the 1990s had outperformed football.
Bangladesh made its full presentation in worldwide cricket in the 1986 Asia Cup. In 1997, Bangladesh won the ICC Trophy in Malaysia and accordingly qualified for its most memorable Cricket World Cup to partake in England in 1999.
There, it crushed Pakistan - causing a lot of upset - and furthermore Scotland. On 26 June 2000, Bangladesh was allowed full ICC enrollment. Bangladesh holds the record for most sequential misfortunes in Tests (21, somewhere in the range of 2000 and 2002) and ODIs (23, somewhere in the range of 2001 and 2004). Subsequent to acquiring Full Member status with the ICC, Bangladesh needed to hold on until 2004 for its most memorable ODI win since the 1999 World Cup.