Bangladesh Bowled Out of T20 World Cup; Scotland to Replace Them

Bangladesh will not travel to India for the ICC T20 World Cup 2026, after the International Cricket Council (ICC) formally rejected the Bangladesh Cricket Board’s (BCB) request to relocate their matches to Sri Lanka

Bangladesh Bowled Out of T20 World Cup; Scotland to Replace Them (Image: crickinformer)

 

Bangladesh will not travel to India for the ICC T20 World Cup 2026, after the International Cricket Council (ICC) formally rejected the Bangladesh Cricket Board’s (BCB) request to relocate their matches to Sri Lanka. Following this decision, Scotland has been named as Bangladesh’s replacement in the tournament.

Earlier on Wednesday, the ICC held a board meeting lasting nearly an hour and a half, during which Bangladesh’s proposal was put to a vote. Reports indicate that all but two members voted against the request, and even a last-minute show of support from the Pakistan Cricket Board failed to alter the outcome.

Following the rejection, the ICC issued what effectively amounted to an ultimatum, giving Bangladesh 24 hours to confirm whether they would travel to India for the tournament, scheduled from February 7 to March 8.

As per reports, Aminul Islam, a senior BCB official, explained, “The Bangladesh players want to play the World Cup. The Bangladesh government wants Bangladesh to play the World Cup. But we don’t think India is safe for our players.”

He added that the BCB had explored several alternatives, including shifting matches to Sri Lanka or swapping groups with Ireland or Zimbabwe, but these proposals were ultimately not accepted by the ICC.

A Hindustan Times CrickIt report earlier highlighted how Bangladesh’s absence from ICC T20 World Cup 2026 Group C could significantly alter the competitive dynamics, particularly affecting teams like England and the West Indies.

The impact depends on the manner of Bangladesh’s exit. If they are replaced, the group structure remains intact, but the competitive balance shifts. If their matches are declared forfeits, the group risks turning from a sporting contest into an administrative outcome, undermining the tournament’s integrity.

With a replacement, the group remains functional—every team plays the same number of matches, qualification is still determined on the field, and the overall tournament schedule requires minimal adjustment.

Yet the competitive texture changes immediately. Bangladesh occupies a key role in the pool: for England and West Indies, matches against them are high-risk fixtures—the kind that can upset momentum if conditions are tricky, early wickets fall, or match-ups go awry.

Removing that fixture means the top teams lose a match that tests adaptability under pressure.

Consequently, the group could become more predictable at the top, more routine in the middle, and less likely to produce those early shocks that define the drama of a World Cup. In short, while the tournament remains playable, the subtle tension and unpredictability that make the group stage compelling could be diluted.

The T20 World Cup will kick off on February 7, with India and Sri Lanka to co-host the tournament.

There has been some strain in India’s ties with Bangladesh over rising incidents of crimes against minorities in the country.

Last year, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) had asked Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) to release pacer Mustafizur Rahman from their Indian Premier League 2026 squad amid demands following atrocities against minorities in Bangladesh.

Following Rahman’s removal from the IPL, BCB cited growing concerns about the safety and security of the Bangladesh contingent as the reason for not travelling to India for the 2026 T20 World Cup.

Bangladesh’s Youth and Sports Adviser Asif Nazrul on Thursday said that the ICC failed to convince them on security concerns in India.

“ICC has failed to convince us on the security question. ICC has not taken any stand on our grievances. Even the Indian government did not communicate with us, or try to assuage our fears,” Asif Nazrul said reportedly.

Bangladesh was scheduled to kick off their T20 World Cup 2026 campaign on February 7 against two-time champions West Indies at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata. The Litton Das-led side would then face Italy on February 9 at the same venue before facing England in Kolkata again.  After facing England, Bangladesh was scheduled to travel to Mumbai to play Nepal at Wankhede Stadium.

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