Duckett: Bumrah is world’s best, tough to face under lights downhill
Bumrah (3/48) was exceptional, grabbing all the England wickets that fell on Day 2, including that of the dangerous Joe Root.
PTI
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Jasprit Bumrah
Leeds, 22 June
Jasprit Bumrah is
undoubtedly the world's best bowler and extremely hard to face when he
"comes in down the hill with lights on and swinging both ways", feels
England opener Ben Duckett after the India pace spearhead tormented the host batters
in the opening Test.
Bumrah (3/48) was
exceptional, grabbing all the England wickets that fell on Day 2, including
that of the dangerous Joe Root. England, though, recovered from the early loss
of opener Zak Crawley (4) to end the day on 209 for 3 in reply to India's first
innings total of 471.
One-down Ollie Pope
was holding fort on unbeaten 100 with England still trailing by 262 runs.
“He (Bumrah) is the
best bowler in the world. He’s extremely hard to face, good in any conditions,
and when he’s coming in down the hill with the lights on and it’s swinging both
ways, it’s tough," Duckett said after play on Day 2 Saturday.
"His ability to
bowl three or four different balls with no cue -- you don’t know if he’s
bowling a bouncer, or a slow ball, a yorker, an away-swinger or an inswinger
until it comes out of his hand. You’ve got to watch the ball so hard with him,
it's very difficult to pick up Jasprit.”
Pope survived Bumrah
onslaught to lead the England fightback and hit his ninth Test ton under trying
conditions, and Duckett said the one-drop batter "stayed true to the way
he plays".
“He (Pope) was just
so calm coming out. He probably couldn’t come out in tougher conditions, with
Jasprit Bumrah running down the hill with the lights on. I don’t know what’s
inside his head, but he’s just stayed true to the way he plays," said
Duckett who made 62 before becoming Bumrah's second victim.
"There’s no
better feeling than that, scoring a hundred against that attack, coming out in
the first over. You could see it in the way he celebrated, and it didn’t just
mean a lot to him, it meant a huge amount in the dressing room as well. I had
goosebumps for him.”
There was speculation
about Pope’s place in the team despite his 171 in the one-off Test against
Zimbabwe last month, but the century under pressure and against a fiery Bumrah
may silence the sceptics for a while at least.
“We’re very good at
keeping things in the dressing room, but obviously you can hear the noise from
outside of it. There’s noise outside the dressing room but there’s no noise in
it. We’re not having discussions about who’s going to play," said Duckett.
"It seemed pretty clear coming into this Test match that if a bloke scores 171 a few weeks ago he's going to play this one. The way Pope has dealt with that has just been superb and just sums up and proves why he’s England’s No 3 and doing the things that he’s doing.”
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