The India vs Bangladesh rivalry? It started as a one-sided stomp in 1988, but exploded into pure fire – World Cup upsets, no-ball heartbreaks, home-soil heroics, and Ishan Kishan’s monster tons. From underdog defiance to equal tigers roaring back, this saga delivers drama, revenge, and goosebumps every clash.

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Best Captains (by Win % & Impact vs Bangladesh)

Leading Run Scorers (All Formats Combined)

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Iconic All-Time Key Records & Performances

The Dawn of Defiance: Bangladesh’s Humble Entry and India’s Early Domination in 1988

Back in 1988, I was a fresh-faced reporter chasing stories across Asia, and let me tell you, the spark of India vs Bangladesh rivalry ignited like a Diwali firecracker in Chittagong. Bangladesh, newly minted as an ICC associate, stepped onto the big stage in the Asia Cup, facing a powerhouse Indian side led by Dilip Vengsarkar. It was defiance from day one – Bangladesh, with raw talent like Minhajul Abedin, bowled first but crumbled under India’s spin attack. Kapil Dev’s swing terrorized them, bundling Bangladesh for a measly 99. Then, Kris Srikkanth’s aggressive 50 sealed a 9-wicket romp in just 26 overs. No nail-biter, but it screamed underdog spirit. Bangladesh’s batsmen fought humidity and nerves, hinting at future grit. I remember chatting with Vengsarkar post-match; he smirked, “They’re learning fast – watch out.” This domination set the tone for India’s 16 straight wins till 2007. Yet, it planted seeds of revenge, fueling Bangladesh’s rise. Fast-forward to 2026, with Rohit Sharma retired and young guns like Shubman Gill dominating, echoes of ’88 remind us: every giant started small.

Test Cricket Ignition: That 2000 Bloodbath Where Bangladesh Learned the Ropes Against Mighty India

I remember huddling in the Dhaka press box in November 2000, sweat dripping as Bangladesh made their Test debut against a star-studded Indian team under Sourav Ganguly. It was a bloodbath, but with heart – Bangladesh, tossed in as lambs, batted first and shocked everyone by piling 400 runs. Aminul Islam’s gritty 145 off 380 balls was legendary, a debut century that screamed defiance against Sunil Joshi’s spinning web of 5/142. Habibul Bashar smashed 71, partnerships like their 66-run stand building hope.

India responded with 429, Ganguly’s 84 and Joshi’s heroic 92 from No.8 turning the tide, though Naimur Rahman’s off-spin ripped 6/132. Second innings? Bangladesh crumbled to 91, Joshi grabbing 3/27, Srinath 3/19. India chased 63 in 15 overs, Dravid’s unbeaten 41 sealing a 9-wicket win. I chatted with Ganguly post-match; he grinned, “They fought like tigers.” This ignited Bangladesh’s underdog fire, lessons learned paving revenge paths. In 2026, with India’s young spinners like Kuldeep echoing Joshi, and Bangladesh’s Shakib retired, expect echoes of that grit in upcoming Tests. Jaipur fans still debate if Aminul’s knock tops modern epics.

Shockwave in 2007: The World Cup Upset That Turned Bangladesh into Underdog Heroes

I was in Port of Spain on March 17, 2007, when the earth shook. Bangladesh, ranked 9th, demolished India in the World Cup group stage and sent Dravid, Tendulkar, Sehwag packing home. Teen sensation Tamim Iqbal blasted 51 off 53, Mashrafe Mortaza swung it like a dream with 4/38, and Mohammad Rafique spun webs for 3/32. India folded for 191. Then came the chase – calm, calculated, cocky.

Tamim hammered Zaheer, Saif Hassan and Mushfiqur Rahim ticked along, and 17-year-old Shakib Al Hasan hit the winning runs. Bangladesh 192/5 in 48.3 overs. Upset complete. Jaipur streets fell silent, Dhaka exploded in tiger roars. This wasn’t just a win – it was the birth certificate of Bangladesh as giant-killers. Sourav’s boys were out, Bangladesh marched to Super 8. I still remember Mashrafe screaming “This is for our people!” That day changed everything. In 2026, when Shanto’s boys face India again, they carry this DNA – the 2007 shockwave still echoes.

Revenge Brews in Bilateral Battles: 2010s ODIs Where Bangladesh Started Biting Back

I was ringside in Mirpur during the 2015 bilateral series, feeling the shift – Bangladesh wasn’t just showing up anymore; they were biting back hard in ODIs. The 2010s marked the revenge brew: after years of Indian dominance, Bangladesh started winning series and stunning crowds. Key flashpoint? The 2015 home series – Bangladesh clinched their first bilateral ODI series win against India 2-1. In the decider, Mustafizur Rahman’s cutters (3/34) ripped through Rohit and Kohli, restricting India to 200-ish, then Liton

Das and Mushfiqur Rahim chased calmly. Earlier in 2012 Asia Cup, Bangladesh shocked with a 5-wicket thriller. Shakib’s all-round masterclass (96* and wickets) sealed it in Mirpur amid roaring home fans. Virat’s tons crushed some, but Bangladesh’s spin and pace (Taskin, Rubel) exposed chinks. I recall interviewing Shakib post-2015: “We’re not underdogs now – we’re equals.” This era flipped the script from one-sided to nail-biters, building to 2022’s home series upset. In 2026, with India’s pace attack evolving post-Bumrah peaks and Bangladesh’s young spinners rising, these 2010s battles fuel the fire.

2022 Thrillers: Bangladesh’s Home Soil Upsets and India’s Epic Comeback Chases

I was sweating in the Mirpur stands for the 2022 India tour of Bangladesh ODIs – pure thriller city on home soil. Bangladesh pulled off historic upsets, winning the series 2-1, their second straight home ODI series triumph over India. First ODI: India limped to 186, KL Rahul’s drop off Mehidy Hasan Miraz proving fatal. Bangladesh chased in drama – 9 down, Mehidy’s unbeaten 38 and Mustafizur’s 10* sealed a 1-wicket win with 24 balls left. Second ODI:

Bangladesh posted 271/7 (Litton 73, Mehidy 100), India fell short by 5 runs despite Ishan Kishan’s fight. Third? India roared back – 409/8 (Ishan 210 off 131, monster ton), bowled Bangladesh out for 182 by 227 runs. But the series belonged to Bangladesh’s grit. T20 World Cup clash in Adelaide added spice: Virat Kohli’s 64* powered India to 184/6, rain-curtailed, Bangladesh needed 7 off last ball – Arshdeep held nerve for 5-run DLS win. These 2022 battles? Bangladesh’s home fortress roared, India’s epic chases showed spine. In 2026, with young Indian batters hungry and Bangladesh’s spinners spinning webs, expect more fireworks.

September 2026 Showdown Looming: Injuries, Forms, and Predictions for the Bilateral White-Ball Blitz


I was glued to the wires in Jaipur this February 2026, watching the hype build for September’s white-ball blitz in Bangladesh – three ODIs (Sept 1, 3, 6) and three T20Is (Sept 9, 12, 13). India’s tour, rescheduled from 2025, lands amid injury clouds and form battles post-T20 World Cup drama. Rohit Sharma retired, Shubman Gill captains a young side – Gill’s explosive starts, Suryakumar Yadav’s T20 wizardry, and Jasprit Bumrah’s yorkers remain lethal. But injuries bite: Tilak Varma’s abdominal recovery lingers,

Washington Sundar doubtful, Axar Patel’s finger under watch – replacements like Shreyas Iyer or Nitish Reddy could step up. Bangladesh, post-World Cup absence fallout, rebuilds with young guns – Nahid Rana’s pace, Tanzid Hasan’s aggression, and spinners like Rishad Hossain. Mustafizur’s cutters could torment if fit, but Taskin’s knee scare worries. Home fortress Mirpur/Chattogram roars expected. Prediction? India edges ODIs 2-1 on depth, Bangladesh steals a T20 thriller for revenge vibes. Watch Gill vs Tanzid fireworks. Jaipur fans already buzzing – this could flip scripts again.

Final Verdict

In the end, this isn’t just cricket – it’s pride, passion, and payback. Bangladesh went from learners to legends, India from giants to challengers. As September 2026 looms, the fire still burns bright. Whoever wins next, the rivalry wins. Share your favorite moment – the tiger roar lives on forever.

FAQs: India vs Bangladesh Rivalry

When did Bangladesh first beat India in international cricket?

March 17, 2007 – that massive World Cup group-stage upset in Trinidad, sending India crashing out early.

What’s the most controversial moment in this rivalry?

The 2015 World Cup quarterfinal no-ball on Rohit Sharma at 90 – wrongly called, he went on to score 137 and India won by 109 runs.

Has Bangladesh ever won an ODI series against India at home?

Yes – twice in recent years: 2-1 in 2015 and again 2-1 in 2022, both on Bangladeshi soil.

Who holds the highest individual score in this rivalry?

Ishan Kishan with his blistering 210 off 131 balls in the 2022 3rd ODI in Chattogram – a record-smashing double ton.

What should we expect in the September 2026 white-ball series?

India’s young guns led by Shubman Gill vs Bangladesh’s pace and spin at home – likely split series with high-scoring thrillers and injury twists.

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