“The World Cup was a good experience overall,” Sharfuddoula said after that tournament in November. “I didn’t focus too much about this being my first time in the World Cup, or me being the first from Bangladesh. I have also done nine Tests, which gave me a quite a lot of confidence during the tournament. I took it one match at a time, which resulted in having a good time.”He ended up standing in some of the more interesting matches in the tournament. He was witness to two upsets; oversaw the two fastest centuries in the tournament’s history, made within three weeks of each other; and the tightest game of the league phase. Glenn Maxwell wouldn’t mind having Sharfuddoula stand in his matches: the umpire was on the field when he made his 40-ball hundred, against Netherlands, and served as fourth umpire during the epic double-hundred against Afghanistan.When I spoke to him after the tournament, the Brisbane Test wasn’t on Sharfuddoula’s horizon. The appointment came to pass after the strong World Cup showing. When, late last December, he was announced as one of the on-field Test umpires for the match, it was an endorsement of his quality, endurance and experience at the international level.”I consider a Test match the real test for umpires,” Sharfuddoula said. “It is the pinnacle of cricket. You are under constant pressure in that format. You have to keep making adjustments. You don’t have to come back into the same game in an ODI or a T20I game. You face a new challenge every session in a Test match.”Sharfuddoula is a soft-spoken man, and those close to him know him as a practical individual. “I never go too high or too low [emotionally],” he said. “I don’t get upset too easily. I think it was the way I was raised. I had to fend for myself at an early age. I listen to myself, I talk to myself. I was self-responsible growing up, so that always helps.He said that he now has an appreciation for the differences in how umpiring is seen around the world and how it is back home. “If we make a mistake in Bangladesh, it is regarded as a sin. Error of judgement is part of life. How quickly someone can bounce back from it is very important for an umpire.”Sharfuddoula gives a decision in an Afghanistan-Bermuda game in the 2013 World T20 Qualifier tournament in the UAE•ICC/GettyHaving done just one Test in 2023, all the way back in April, having your next one be in a day-night match at the Gabba was a challenge, but it was one he looked forward to.”I went to the World Cup with more than 100 matches under my belt, but a new experience always brings new challenges,” he said. “The Brisbane Test was probably bigger for me, as Test cricket is No. 1, and it was new to me. It wasn’t easy for me to go back into a Test match after eight or nine months. It was also my first game with a pink ball. But I always wanted to do a Test in Brisbane. My wife studies here, so it is one of my favourite cities in the world. It was great to do my first overseas Test there.”The World Cup was something of a change of pace for Sharfuddoula, used as he was to the pressures of Bangladesh cricket, where umpires are often blamed quite directly for match outcomes, and sometimes even become fodder for memes. So though the tournament is world cricket’s biggest stage, it was a more mellow experience for him. “Home games are much more challenging, he said. “I didn’t feel that in the World Cup. I enjoyed the matches there, which isn’t often the case for me.”The often open hostility towards umpires in Bangladesh is one of the reasons why not many take to the profession, including former cricketers. “Whoever wants to come into umpiring or is new in the profession, must keep faith in themselves,” Sharfuddoula said when asked how what advice he would give those aspiring to become officials. “You can’t lose confidence. We are not always recognised for our work. Bangladesh has to change its perception about umpiring. As we keep developing our structure, more umpires can come through the process, which must also be backed by financial security.”Sharfuddoula is a great example of someone in cricket whose hard work paid off. He has made it to the men’s World Cup and a Test match in Australia after years of grinding it out at the domestic and international level. Things are looking up for Sharfuddoula. Maybe it’s time for Bangladesh to collectively treat cricket umpires differently.

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