NEW DELHI: With the 24-hour deadline set by the International Cricket Council (ICC) now expired, the prolonged standoff involving the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) appears to be heading towards an inevitable conclusion. According to reports, the ICC is expected to move swiftly to announce a replacement team for Bangladesh at the ICC T20 World Cup, with Scotland the frontrunner to take the vacant spot.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!As per a Cricbuzz report, the BCB failed to formally communicate its position to the ICC within the stipulated timeframe, despite holding internal discussions with government authorities and representatives of the national players. While media reports indicated intense behind-the-scenes deliberations in Dhaka, no official response was sent to Dubai (ICC headquarters), leaving the ICC with little room for manoeuvre.
Had Bangladesh agreed to travel to India, the issue would have ended. Their continued refusal, however, has triggered the tournament contingency plan. ICC officials had waited for clarity from Dhaka over the past 24 hours, and with none forthcoming, the governing body is now expected to formalise Scotland’s inclusion.BCB president Aminul Islam Bulbul publicly spoke about hopes of a “last-minute miracle”, but those hopes appeared detached from reality. The ICC board has already voted on the matter, placing the final decision squarely in Bangladesh’s court. The BCB had all of Thursday to confirm its participation in the India-hosted tournament but maintained its position, citing security concerns for its players. Bangladesh government sports advisor Asif Nazrul made it clear that the call was political rather than administrative.
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“Now this ICC tournament is being held in India. No matter how much the ICC says there is no security risk, the ICC does not have its own country,” Nazrul said. “The country where my player was not safe — and where the Indian cricket board, an extended arm of the government, failed or was unwilling to provide security under pressure from extremists — that is the country hosting this tournament. Not playing in India is a government decision.”A meeting between Bangladesh’s national cricketers, Nazrul and senior BCB officials on Thursday did little to change the trajectory. According to Cricbuzz, players were not consulted for consent but were instead informed that the decision had already been taken and their World Cup hopes were effectively over.
