However, a number of players are in line to get ODI caps. Twenty-eight-year old batter
Abdul Samad, who has primarily made his name as a hard-hitting T20I player, is in the squad, while 21-year old opener
Shamyl Hussain also finds a place alongside 20-year old
Maaz Sadaqat.
Ghazi Ghori is another batter in line for a potential Pakistan debut, while 21-year old
Saad Masood, with three List A games to his career, will also make the trip to Bangladesh.
The bowling unit is more recognisable. Abrar is the primary spinner, with Mohammad Wasim Jnr and Haris Rauf the quick bowlers alongside Afridi. Ashraf and Hussain Talat are in the squad as bowling and batting allrounders, while left-arm wristspinner
Faisal Akram, who made his ODI debut in 2024, is drafted in as secondary spinner.
Ayub’s axing from what is his best format is, statistically at least, a surprise. He has three hundreds and two half-centuries in his previous 13 ODIs, and played a starring role in Pakistan’s away series wins in Australia and South Africa in late 2024. His continued development as a fingerspinner has helped balance the squad in the past.
Babar, who has historically also found ODI cricket to be his most impressive format, did have an ordinary 2025. However, he scored his first century in 30 months in his second-most recent innings during a home series
against Sri Lanka. There is no place in the squad for Naseem Shah, either, who played one match in the T20 World Cup, while Mohammad Nawaz, who had a poor tournament, is also left out of the 50-over series.
Shaheen Shah Afridi (capt), Abdul Samad, Abrar Ahmed, Faheem Ashraf, Faisal Akram, Haris Rauf, Hussain Talat, Maaz Sadaqat, Mohammad Rizwan (wk), Mohammad Wasim Jnr, Ghazi Ghori (wk), Saad Masood, Sahibzada Farhan, Salman Ali Agha, Shamyl Hussain