Jasprit Bumrah

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Jasprit Bumrah
Jasprit Bumrah (4).jpg
Bumrah in 2019
Personal information
Full nameJasprit Jasbirsingh Bumrah
Born (1993-12-06) 6 December 1993 (age 27)
Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm fast
RoleBowler
Relations
Sanjana Ganesan (wife)
(m. 2021)
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 290)6 January 2018 v South Africa
Last Test2 September 2021 v England
ODI debut (cap 210)23 January 2016 v Australia
Last ODI2 December 2020 v Australia
ODI shirt no.93
T20I debut (cap 57)26 January 2016 v Australia
Last T20I2 February 2020 v New Zealand
T20I shirt no.93
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2012–presentGujarat
2013–presentMumbai Indians (squad no. 93)
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI T20I FC
Matches 24 67 50 52
Runs scored 130 19 8 310
Batting average 5.41 3.16 4.00 9.11
100s/50s 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/1
Top score 34* 10* 7 55*
Balls bowled 5,201 3,523 1,075 10,467
Wickets 101 108 59 193
Bowling average 22.79 25.33 20.25 24.17
5 wickets in innings 6 1 0 12
10 wickets in match 0 n/a n/a 0
Best bowling 6/27 5/27 3/11 6/27
Catches/stumpings 6/– 17/– 7/– 15/–
Source: ESPNCricinfo, 6 September 2021

Jasprit Jasbirsingh Bumrah (born 6 December 1993) is an Indian international cricketer, who plays for the Indian national cricket team in all formats of the game.[1] He is a right arm fast bowler. After a couple of moderately successful seasons with the Mumbai Indians at the Indian Premier League, and with his domestic team Gujarat, he was named in India's squad for its 2015–16 series against Australia, as a replacement to an injured Mohammed Shami.[2] Bumrah made his debut in One Day Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals in 2015–16 series against Australia. He is the first Asian bowler to take 5 wickets in a test innings in South Africa, England and Australia during the same calendar year.[3] He is also the third highest wicket taker in test matches in a debut year with 48 wickets in 8 matches.[citation needed]

Personal life[]

Bumrah was born in a Punjabi family which settled in Ahmedabad, Gujarat.[4] Bumrah's father, Jasbir Singh, died when he was 5 years old.[5] He was brought up by his mother Daljit Bumrah, a school teacher in Ahmedabad, Gujarat in a middle-class surrounding. Daljit made an appearance in the 2019 Netflix documentary Cricket Fever: Mumbai Indians where she was emotional on the cricketing success of her son.[6][7]

On 15 March 2021, he married model and Star Sports presenter Sanjana Ganesan in Goa.[8][9][10] Hailing from Pune, Maharashtra, Ganesan is a former Miss India finalist and was also a participant in MTV's Splitsvilla in 2014.[11]

Domestic cricket[]

Bumrah plays first-class cricket for Gujarat and made his debut against Vidarbha in October 2013 during the 2013–14 season.[12] He picked up 7 wickets in the match. Eventually, he ended the tournament as the side's leading wicket-taker.

A right-arm fast-medium pacer from Gujarat with an unusual bowling action, Bumrah made his T20 debut against Maharashtra in the 2012–13 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, and also helped his side clinch the title with his Man of the Match performance. His figures of 3/14 were instrumental to Gujarat's win over Punjab in the final.[13]

A 19-year old Bumrah grabbed instant limelight when on his Indian Premier League (IPL) debut, he finished with figures of 3/32 against Royal Challengers Bangalore.[14] While doing so, he became only the second bowler in the side to take three wickets on debut. Though he played just a couple of games in the Pepsi IPL 2013 for Mumbai Indians, his impressive show in the domestic circuit convinced the Mumbai Indians management to buy him back for Pepsi IPL 2014 season.[15] He was named in the IPL XI of the tournament in 2017 by Cricbuzz.[16] In 2018 he took 78 wickets.

He was also named in the T20 XI of the years 2016 and 2017 by ESPNCricinfo and in 2017 by Cricbuzz.[17][18][19]

Bumrah went on to win the 2019 IPL title with Mumbai Indians for a record 4th time while also being adjudged the Man of the Match in the final against Chennai Super Kings.

In the 2020 IPL, Bumrah was instrumental in Mumbai qualifying for the final. Bumrah delivered a man of the match performance in the qualifier.[20]

On 11 December 2020, he scored his maiden first class half century (55*) against Australia A during the India tour of Australia.[21]

International career[]

Bumrah made his T20I debut on 26 January 2016 against Australia.

In the two matches, T20I series against West Indies in August 2016, he became the bowler to claim most wickets (28) in Twenty20 Internationals in one calendar year surpassing the record of Dirk Nannes.[22]

In January 2017, in the second match of T20I series of England's 2016–17 India tour, Bumrah played a crucial role in India's win. He picked up two wickets and gave away 20 runs in his quota of four overs. Bowling at the death, in the final over, he took 2 wickets giving away only two runs when England needed eight to win. He was awarded Player of the Match, he produced an excellent yorker in the final ball, with 6 runs required.[23] During the 2017 Sri Lanka tour, Bumrah recorded the most wickets (15) taken by any fast bowler in a bilateral ODI series of five or fewer matches.[24] He is remembered for bowling a no-ball in the final of the Champions Trophy 2017 that resulted in a wicket. The batsman, Fakhar Zaman, went on to score a match-defining century.[25]

In November 2017, he was named in India's Test squad for their series against South Africa.[26] He made his Test debut for India against South Africa at Newlands in Cape Town on 5 January 2018.[27] Jasprit Bumrah got his maiden Test wicket as he clean bowled AB de Villiers for 65 runs.[28] In the 3rd Test Match of India Tour of South Africa 2017-18, at Johannesburg, Bumrah took his maiden five-wicket haul in Tests, with figures of 5/54 from 18.5 overs.[29]

Jasprit Bumrah (fourth from left) fielding during India vs England, in Trentbridge (August, 2018)

Bumrah took his 2nd five-wicket haul in Tests, with figures of 5/85 from 29 overs, in the 3rd Test Match of India Tour of England 2018, at Trent Bridge, as India defeated England by 203 runs.[30]

On the Boxing Day Test of India Tour of Australia 2018, Bumrah took his 3rd five-wicket haul in Tests, on the 3rd day, with career-best figures of 6/33, to wrap up Australia's first innings on 151. By doing that, he also became the first Asian bowler to take five-wicket hauls in Australia, England and South Africa in the same calendar year.[31] Overall, he had finished the series as the highest wicket-taker, with 21 wickets.[32] He had finished the year, with 48 wickets, which was a record for Indian bowler in his debut year in Test cricket.[33] For his performances in 2018, he was named both in the World Test XI and ODI XI by the ICC.[34]

Jasprit Bumrah has the best and the most effective yorker among fast bowlers playing international cricket now

– Legendary pacer Wasim Akram, January 2019[35]

In April 2019, he was named in India's squad for the 2019 Cricket World Cup.[36][37] The International Cricket Council (ICC) named him as one of the five exciting talents making their Cricket World Cup debut.[38] On 5 June 2019, in India's opening match of the tournament, against South Africa, Bumrah played in his 50th ODI match.[39] On 6 July 2019, in the match against Sri Lanka, Bumrah took his 100th wicket in ODIs and became the second-fastest Indian to do so after his counterpart, Mohammed Shami.In January 2019, during the tour of New Zealand, Shami claimed his 100th ODI wicket in first of the five games bowling Martin Guptill out. Mohammed Shami became the fastest Indian bowler to claim 100 ODI wickets. Shami reached the milestone in his 56th match, with the wicket of opener Martin Guptill.The Indian record was previously held by Irfan Pathan, who got there in his 59th match, against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi in 2006. The world record is currently held by Afghanistan leg-spinner Rashid Khan, who needed only 44 games to reach the mark. Shami is joint-sixth with New Zealand fast bowler Trent Boult.[40][41] He finished the tournament as the leading wicket-taker for India and the fifth highest overall, with eighteen dismissals in nine matches.[42] He was named in the 'Team of the Tournament' by the ICC and ESPNCricinfo.[43][44]

In August 2019, Bumrah took his fourth Test five-wicket haul against the West Indies in the first Test match of India tour of West Indies 2019, at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, with figures of 5/7 in the 2nd innings.[45] In the second Test match, he became the third bowler for the Indian cricket team to take a hat-trick in a Test match.[46] In 2019 ODI World Cup, Bumrah became the first bowler ranking 1st in the ICC ODI BOWLER list without playing ODI WORLD CUP

Bumrah played his maiden Test match in India in the M. A. Chidambaram Stadium against England in February 2021 after playing 17 Tests overseas. His maiden Test wicket in India was of Daniel Lawrence for nought in England Tour of India 2021.[47][48][49]

On 6th September 2021 in the 4th test match versus England, Bumrah became the fastest Indian pacer to 100 wickets, completing the feat in only 24 test matches.[citation needed] Later the same month, Bumrah was named in India's squad for the 2021 ICC Men's T20 World Cup.[50]He is one of the only three fast bowlers in the main squad, the other two being Mohammed Shami and the white-ball specialist, Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Bowling at the death is probably what gave Shami an edge over Deepak Chahar and Shardul Thakur [both in the reserves], who have had greater success up top. Shami has got 14 death-over wickets since IPL 2020, which is the same as Deepak Chahar, Shardul Thakur and Mohammed Siraj combined. He can move the ball both ways, as he's shown ample times in the past, and as a bonus, he has the undefinable ability to be unplayable regardless of format when he gets into his rhythm.[56]

Bowling style[]

Bumrah gained prominence with his unorthodox action. He has an anomalous, sling-arm action and coupled with natural pace, and a peculiar release point of his deliveries makes it hard for the batsmen to pick him up early.[51] He bowls outside the off-stump or short quite consistently.[52][53]

I think Jasprit Bumrah is very, very interesting. He runs off a very short run-up. He jogs and then bowls with a very short run. He has got straight arms. His bowling is not textbook by any means, but it works. He is very different from other pace bowlers, which reminds me of another fast bowler of my era, who was very different from everyone else – Jeff Thomson.

– Legendary Australian fast bowler Dennis Lillee, December 2018[54]

Bumrah carved himself a reputation for possessing an uncanny ability to hit the blockhole,[55][56] just like his Mumbai Indians team-mate, the Sri Lankan Lasith Malinga. Bumrah has grown into an indispensable asset for the Indian team in the limited-overs format.[57][58][59]

Bumrah is considered one of the fastest Indian bowlers with an average speed of 142 km/h, his fastest being 153.26 km/h, which he bowled during the first Test match of India Tour of Australia 2018, at the Adelaide Oval, outpacing Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins.[60][61]

My all-time favourite bowlers are Mitchell Johnson, Wasim Akram and Brett Lee. I used to watch their videos and learn from them. I have learnt a lot from Johnson, and Malinga too. I try to learn from any senior bowlers who have played international cricket. – Bumrah[62]

Mumbai Indians bowling coach and former New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond said: "Boom's action, though unique, is repeatable. He has great control."[7]

Former Indian fast bowler Ashish Nehra also commented on his bowling action:

What you do in 75–80% of your run-up, nothing matters. It's the last 15–20%, the last four-five steps, which is the main thing. That is bowling. Bumrah runs differently, but in his last three-four steps – he is loading, front leg, back leg, everything is in alignment, and he is quick through the air.[7]

Awards[]

References[]

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