Leeds has been outdoors this week, making the most of the unusually sunny days for North England. There are sun-bathers on terraces, loungers, kids in parks with elders on folding chairs and camping vans headed to fishing spots outside the city.
This weekend, the city’s heat-seekers will head to Headingley as raising the temperatures of the city even further, is the England-India Test that starts on Friday. And for many, the pull to enjoy the cricket, and the sun, is the world’s premier fast-bowler, the red-hot speedster Jasprit Bumrah.
For years, Indian cricket’s USP was their batsmen. But that era officially folded last month with the Test retirements of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. The baton of that grand legacy has been passed to a young worthy batsman, the new Test captain Shubman Gill, but he isn’t yet a mega star in these parts. Bumrah certainly is, and fans at Leeds will be travelling the proverbial miles to soak in the sight of him ambling to the crease, and unleashing those thunderbolts with that ram-rod straight right-arm.
Those from Bradford, the sprawling city with close to 35 per cent British Asians, will drive nine miles to reach Leeds. They will be traveling in hordes, their loungers and garden chairs packed in the boots of their cars. Those with roots in Pakistan are in majority here and that explains the awe and respect Bradford has for quicks and the trips to Headingley to get a speed-trip.
“We had heard that Bumrah will be playing just three of the five Tests but we were sure he would not miss the first one at Headingley. There might be heat, there might not be moisture in the air as North England is used to, but Bumrah doesn’t depend on conditions and pitch. He can make batsmen quake,” Rizwan Jan, a club-level cricketer and corner-shop owner in Bradford, said.
Not just weekend cricketers and fans, even the game’s greats have their wish list when Bumrah gets the new ball in his hands. Sachin Tendulkar, the man whose name is etched on the new trophy along with English pacer Jimmy Anderson, wants Bumrah to target the stumps.
“One thing I would like to see from him is if he’s able to keep the ball on stumps in the first hour, not allowing batters to leave. Because my gut feel is they would want to give respect to Bumrah and not try too many fancy things against him. So he needs to attack the stumps and if they are looking to leave the ball…,” Tendulkar told The Indian Express.
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The world knows what happens when you leave a Bumrah straight one — stumps fly and the crowd roars.
The interest in Bumrah is country-agnostic. With Ashes months away, the English are closely watching the pacer who made life tough for their eternal enemy, the Aussies, a few months back. The recently retired England pacer Stuart Broad, in a chat with one-time teammate and former skipper Jos Buttler, expressed his fascination for the finer points of Bumrah’s bowling.
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“Watch him on Friday or Saturday or whenever India gets to bowl, how Bumrah, during his spell, never bowls from the same point. He is moving on the crease all the time, half a foot or a foot. Those little adjustments he makes at the end of the run-up, how he changes his shoulder and wrist position at delivery points, it becomes difficult to judge where his ball comes from,” he said.
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Broad explains how someone like Shoaib Akhtar is slightly easier to read since his long run gives an idea about what to expect. Bumrah’s calm run-up, short strikes, balanced approach doesn’t give any hint that a 90 miles per hour delivery is on the way.
Jasprit Bumrah of India celebrating the wicket of Ollie Pope of England during the 2nd day of the second test match between India and England held at the Dr. Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium, Visakhapatnam on the 3rd February 2024. (Sportzpics)
Another hardened English pro, the former English batsman Mark Butcher, offers a kamikaze strategy to tackle Bumrah — a clear sign of the Indian pacer’s aura in these parts. “We rather get out to him after scoring a few, than sit there and get out to him anyways… look at the way England play at their best and none of them are shit-hot (very good) defensively… so that’s just asking the devil around for tea and cake,” he told The Grade Cricketer podcast.
Far from Leeds, in India, there is an anticipation to watch Bumrah. Bharat Arun, India’s bowling coach when Bumrah made his Test debut, speaks about the pacer’s liveliest spell he has seen. “It was at Perth in the 2018 series, That was when I could see the fear in the Aussies, they were getting paid with the same coin. That was probably one of the quickest spells I’ve seen of Bumrah,” he said.
Though, for the first Test, Arun says he wouldn’t mind if it is not a fiery spell but something that makes the batsmen uncomfortable.
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Hoping for a Perth-like spell
Back to Bradford and to Shubham Chawla, the duty officer at Yorkshire County Club. Hailing from Nagpur, he is now ECB’s Level 2 coach and faces a strange dilemma. He has tickets for Day 4 but if Bumrah bowls a fiery Perth-like spell the game would end early.
“Bumrah making the stumps fly is a sight. When Kohli and Rohit retired, there was disappointment among the Indians here. But now closer to the Test, we are excited to watch Bumrah. He has just 45 Tests but he is already being seen as a great of the game. He is poetry in motion… badi umeed hai, woh Bumrah hai (there is a lot of hope, he is Bumrah).”