Binod Das first played for Nepal at Under-19 level. He played in the 1997 Youth Asia Cup in
Hong Kong and 1999 Youth Asia Cup in
Singapore, where Nepal finished as runners-up. Then he led Nepal in the
2000 Under-19 World Cup, their first ever
Under-19 World Cup. He was the leading Nepalese wicket-taker in the tournament with 9 wickets from 5 matches at an average of 16.88 and an economy of 3.81. He also played in the 2000 ICC Under-17 Asia Cup in
Pakistan later in the year, before making his debut for the senior side in the
2000 ACC Trophy. he returned to the Under-19 team for the
2002 Under-19 World Cup in
New Zealand. He led the team to finish the tournament as plate runners-up and
Bangladesh. In a group match against
Namibia, he picked up 3 wickets to secure a close victory. He was adjudged the man of the match. He scored 131 runs in 7 innings at an average of 21.83 and picked up 11 wickets at an average of 19.36 and an economy rate of 3.45 in the tournament. Then he represented Nepal in the
2002 ACC Trophy, 2002/03 ACC Emerging Nations Tournament and 2003/04 ACC Emerging Nations Tournament. He made
first-class debut in March 2004 when he played for Nepal against the
UAE in the
2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup. Playing his debut match, he picked up 6 wickets, including a five-wicket haul in the first innings. He also played in the
2004 ACC Trophy and in the 2004/05
ACC Fast Track Countries Tournament, where he was the sixth highest wicket-taker with 12 wickets from 4 matches including a five-wicket haul against
Hong Kong. In February 2005 he played in the
repêchage tournament of the
2005 ICC Trophy, where he scored 135 runs in 5 innings at an average of 45.00 and picked up 6 wickets at an average of 22.16 and an economy rate of 3.48. He also played 2005/06
ACC Fast Track Countries Tournament matches against
Singapore,
Malaysia, the
UAE and
Hong Kong. He was the leading wicket-taker of the tournament with 21 wickets from 4 matches at an average of 8.67. The matches against the
UAE and Hong Kong were also counted towards the
2005 ICC Intercontinental Cup. Including these two matches, he played a total of three first-class matches. He scored 56 runs at an average of 28.00 and picked up 19 wickets at an average of 11.42 including three five-wicket hauls. His bowling figures of 6/29 in an innings and 7/37 in a match are the best bowling figures by a Nepalese bowler in the first-class format. In 2006, he toured
Pakistan with the Nepalese team to play a match against Pakistan Cricket Academy, where he picked up the wicket of future
Pakistani player
Khurram Manzoor. == Coaching ==