Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

Bumrah busts myth about English conditions

June 20, 2019 20:30 IST

'Whatever white ball cricket I have played so far, I felt the flattest wickets are those in England. There's no help for the bowlers on these tracks.'

Jasprit Bumrah

Jasprit Bumrah is of the view that the pitches in England used for white ball cricket are the "flattest tracks" he has ever bowled on, as there is rarely any movement in the air or off the pitch.

The pacer, one of the most important components in India’s set-up, busted the myth about English conditions and tracks during an interaction with the media in Southampton on Thursday.

 

"Whatever white ball cricket I have played so far, I felt the flattest wickets are those in England. There's no help for the bowlers on these tracks.

"You see cloud cover and feel that the ball will swing but neither there is seam movement nor there is swing," said Bumrah, whose assessment will not exactly be music to the ears of the International Cricket Council or England and Wales Cricket Board.

The world's premier fast bowler said when India plays in England the Indian bowling unit is always ready for the worst case scenario, and if some help is available it is treated as bonus.

"You have to rely a lot on your accuracy and clarity. So that's what we try to do. We know that wickets are flat in England and while bowling we take that into consideration as the worst possible scenario. So if there is a bit of help, then adjustment becomes easy."

Bumrah, who bowled a lethal first spell against South Africa in India's World Cup opener, feels the track at Southampton was a decent one first up but stroke-making became easier once the two new balls got a bit old.

"In the first game that we played here there was some help with the new ball but it was a decent wicket. But as soon as the ball got older, it became better to bat on. Oval was a batting wicket, where you saw 350 being scored," he observed.

Bumrah feels that it is better to analyse the wicket on the match day and decide accordingly.

"But you don't focus on these things. You see on a given day what works for you. So quickly analyse the wicket and see if there's no help, you go back to your strengths.

"When sometimes there is help, you try to swing the ball and take some wickets," said the bowler, who has scalped five wickets from three games so far in the World Cup.

He also said opening the bowling with Mohammed Shami will hardly make a difference as all three (Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Shami and him) have bowled together a lot of times.

Normally fast bowlers don't go full tilt at the nets, especially when they are playing matches regularly, but the case is different for Bumrah.

Bumrah had K L Rahul and Virat Kohli in all sorts of trouble during Thursday's net session.

A perfect yorker found Rahul wanting as he failed to bring his bat down and the right-hander's off-stump pegged back.

When Kohli batted, he got one to just shoot up from short of good length and the world's most fearsome batsman was seen literally ducking for cover.

The ball hit the top of the bat and flew. If it was a Test match with a gully fielder, the Indian skipper was gone for good.

But Kohli was not angry at all. He said something which wasn't audible, but the smile said it all. Certainly, the skipper was impressed.

Then there was one that pitched on length and beat the bat. From the angle one watched it, it was difficult to say if there was movement off the deck but it was at a fair clip.

There weren't any more smiles as the skipper defended the next few confidently.

"With Bumrah, he exactly bowls in the nets as he bowls in the match," Kohli had said earlier.

Ask Bumrah about that and he echoes his captain's observation about him.

"Sometimes you want to try something different in the match and you want to try that in the nets as well. You want to execute everything in the nets. In the match, it's just repetition.

"Be it a death bowling session or with new ball, I do it in the nets. You watch the batsman's feeds and try to replicate that in the nets."