Tamim Iqbal celebrates a historic hundred against England at Lord's in 2010. Julian Herbert/Getty Images

Tamim Iqbal: Great Bangladesh Batsman or Underachiever?

Tim Collins

Tamim Iqbal's innings on the opening day of the second Test against New Zealand on Monday was a rather neat encapsulation of his career thus far.

Style, aggression and talent powered the 24-year-old to a brisk 95, before naive carelessness brought about his downfall. After flaying the Kiwi attack for 17 boundaries (with the aid of some good fortune), the brightest light in the Bangladeshi side threw his wicket away with the very ignorance that may prove to be the handbrake on his career.

With a platform well set at 208-3, Tamim was the batsman that needed to enforce the home side's advantage by ensuring his team pushed on past 400. He'd ridden a degree of luck to that point and was in position to capitalise on the lifelines afforded to him by the tourists.

Yet, instead of inflicting pain on New Zealand, Tamim allowed them back into the game, using his bat as a ramp to spoon-feed a catch to Kane Williamson at gully. 

The error of judgement would have been excusable in different circumstances had prior warning not already been given. But after watching a collection of erroneous shots fly past (or through) the hands of the fielders behind the wicket, the left-hander should have been acutely aware of the danger that existed behind point.

An obvious lesson not learnt, the halt in progress that Tamim's dismissal had on his team's innings was much the same that his ingenuousness may have on Bangladesh's overall progress.

While his high stakes approach can be rousing, you can't help but feel that a lack of poise and nous are handcuffing him to a post of underachievement.

Tamim Iqbal's record is inferior to his international contemporaries. /Getty Images

What comes natural to Tamim are the more difficult elements of batting: Scoring with freedom, sending the ball to all corners and batting with a defined, graceful style. Unusually, it's the mental application and psychological basics that appear to be a challenge.

In fact, Tamim's approach reminds of a young Michael Clarke. The now-Australia captain employed an exuberant, yet brash attitude in his early years, which saw his career flirt dangerously with mediocrity.

However, unlike Tamim, Clarke had all-powerful pillars of example surrounding his existence in the Australian team, which undoubtedly led to the development that has seen him become one of his nation's all-time greats.

Tamim, meanwhile, is embedded in a setup with far lower benchmarks. Bangladesh's ongoing infancy in the Test arena means that the promising 24-year-old will not be shaped by a long history of excellence. 

In essence, the dashing opener needs to be the man to set the expectations.

It's that very point which currently separates Tamim from being great by his nation's moderate standards and being great by international cricket's standards.

That difference is represented by the immensely talented batsman's Test record. When comparing Tamim against both his Bangladeshi contemporaries and predecessors, the 24-year-old's record sits as arguably his country's finest.

Batsman Matches Runs Highest Score Average
Habibul Bashar 50 3,026 113 30.87
Mohammad Ashraful 61 2,737 190 24.00
Tamim Iqbal 30 2,151 151 37.73
Mushfiqur Rahim 36 2,078 200 32.46
Shakib Al Hasan 32 2,073 144 36.36

A superior average that is enhanced by four impressive hundreds should see the emerging talent become Bangladesh's highest run scorer in the near future.

But given the talent at his disposal, that should be the least of his ambitions. 

Yet, it's when you compare Tamim's record to other emerging batsmen of a similar age that it becomes clear he's underachieving and, perhaps, restrained by the cricketing stature of his nation.

Batsman Matches Runs Highest Score Average
Dinesh Chandimal (SL) 7 583 116* 58.30
Darren Bravo (WI) 23 1,649 195 44.56
Virat Kohli (IND) 18 1,175 116 41.96
Joe Root (ENG) 11 763 180 40.15
Tamim Iqbal (BAN) 30  2,151  151  37.73
Steve Smith (AUS) 12  765  138*  34.77 

The four players above Tamim (sorted by average) all own less experience in the Test arena than the Bangladeshi, while Steve Smith sitting below has undergone a transformation with regards to his role. 

With 30 Test appearances, the 24-year-old should own both the ability and know-how to be jostling amongst the top spots on this list. Certainly, the stroke play and raw talent are there to enable him to rival the likes of Dinesh Chandimal and Darren Bravo.

Frustratingly, it's the manner of his dismissal on day one of the ongoing Test against the Black Caps that perfectly illustrates his predicament.

Virat Kohli's success should be a target for Tamim Iqbal. /Getty Images

Prolific run scoring is prevented by moments of calamity. His composure, or lack thereof, threatens to condemn Bangladesh's brightest star to a prison of underachievement. 

You can point to two wasted innings against the West Indies in 2011 for examples, when potential centuries were blown. Tamim did much the same against the identical opponent a year later, while another poor shot halted his team's progress against Sri Lanka earlier this year.

It's those lose shots, that lack of application, which are the glaring weaknesses in his arsenal. For the talented 24-year-old to breakthrough the current ceiling in place for Bangladeshi players, Tamim must elevate his own expectations.

Being his nation's star is longer enough. Being an international star should be the next target. 



   
   

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