Mushfiqur Rahim joins exclusive centurion club in 100th Test

The veteran Bangladesh wicket-keeper-batter achieved a rare feat in his landmark Test against Ireland in Dhaka.

Rahim 100 milestone

Bangladesh’s seasoned campaigner Mushfiqur Rahim joined a select group of batters to have scored a century in their 100th Test match.

Becoming the first-ever Bangladesh player to cross the milestone of playing 100 Test matches, Rahim scored a valiant 106 off 214 deliveries to help the home team to ascendancy in the second Test against Ireland.

Rahim joins the likes of Colin Cowdrey, Javed Miandad, Gordon Greenidge and Graeme Smith to have achieved the historic feat.

Batters with century in 100th Test

BatterScore(s)Opposition (Year)
Colin Cowdrey104Australia (1968)
Javed Miandad145India (1989)
Gordon Greenidge149England (1990)
Alec Stewart105West Indies (2000)
Inzamam-ul-Haq184India (2005)
Ricky Ponting120 & 143*South Africa (2006)
Graeme Smith131England (2012)
Hashim Amla134Sri Lanka (2017)
Joe Root218India (2021)
David Warner200South Africa (2022)
Mushfiqur Rahim106Ireland (2025)

An exception in the tally of 11 batters who have done the aforementioned is ICC Hall of Famer, Ricky Ponting, who scored centuries in both innings of his 100th Test match against South Africa in Sydney back in 2006.

The latest batters to have done so before Rahim were Joe Root (2021) and David Warner (2022).

Mushfiqur said it was a great honour to become the first Bangladesh player to feature in 100 Test matches.

"I can't believe that someone from Bangladesh has played a hundred Tests, so it's really a huge achievement," Mushfiqur said.

"It is a proud moment for any player. So obviously I am happy that I could be that person. There's more responsibility on me. I want to give back for as long as I am playing for Bangladesh, and I want to ensure there are one or two players who can fill my gap when I have left the dressing room.

"I think 100 is a huge number, so I have learned many things while getting there. I have tried to gather experience and learned how to stay calm. To be honest, I really want to thank the BCB for what they planned on the first morning. It really feels great and I really felt honoured. I think this type of recognition can work as an inspiration for cricketers. It is important for them to dream that they want to play 100 Tests."

Having won the toss and elected to bat first, Bangladesh established a firm hand by finishing Day 1 in Dhaka with 292 runs on the board at the loss of four wickets.

Rahim would finish unbeaten at 99. The 38-year-old would cross past triple digits early on Day 2 for the 13th time in his Test career.

His innings, laced with five boundaries, have put the hosts in a promising position to sweep the two-match series.

The hosts had nabbed a victory by an innings and 47 runs in the first Test in Sylhet to go 1-0 up in the series.

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