India s best ODI bowling attack is here to perform but they need to play a lot more together
India s best ODI bowling attack is here to perform but they need to play a lot more together Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Approve Reject & ban Delete Logout
The journey to the in 2️⃣5️⃣ seconds But the question always revolved around whether they could repeat their heroics against India. Not just because the Men In Blue are much stronger than Netherlands. But also because they are arguably the gold standard when it comes to ODI bowling attacks. There might be a few who might be wondering what the fuss is all about, considering Bumrah, Chahal and Shami have been around for more than half a decade now, and their displays haven’t suddenly peaked. So, here are some stats that prove why Bumrah, Chahal and Shami featuring together for India against England is, well, a pretty big deal. As things stand, Shami (27.2) has the best strike-rate of all Indian bowlers to have picked up a minimum of 50 wickets in ODI cricket. Chahal (31.2) is third on that particular list – only behind Shami and Amit Mishra. Bumrah (31.4) is fourth and Kuldeep Yadav, who is currently nursing an injury, is fifth (32.3).
India s best ODI bowling attack is here to perform but they need to play a lot more together
Jasprit Bumrah (R) has been brilliant against England Over the years, have been synonymous with producing generation-defining batters in ODI cricket. Sachin Tendulkar was the gold standard for batting for a couple of decades before took over that mantle during the 2010s. Virender Sehwag and Yuvraj Singh were also pioneers, and is arguably the greatest finisher the white-ball game has ever seen. Unsurprisingly, each of them generated enormous fanfare. Whenever someone talked cricket in India, it was about the glorious straight drives Sachin executed, the punchy cover-drives Kohli unfurled, the majestic sixes Sehwag and Yuvraj hit, and of course, the brute force Dhoni applied. The flip-side, though, was that batting became the more glamourous and fashionable gig. It wasn’t because they’d done something wrong. It was, more or less, what it was. It’s not as if India didn’t produce extraordinary bowlers even when their batters dominated the headlines. It’s just that they were reduced to supporting acts – acts that often flew under the radar. Not anymore. In the past few years, India has morphed into one of the best, if not the best, ODI bowling unit on the planet. Much of it has been due to the revolution instigated by the , wherein young kids let their hair down and just go searching for wickets. Bowling quick remains taxing but there are much greater rewards on offer, hence, the emergence of speed merchants of Umran Malik’s ilk. The IPL has also fostered a fast-bowling culture in the country – one that has directly led to the development of , and several others. The best part is that they’ve not just dazzled intermittently. They’ve done it so often that it has become the norm – a norm that makes many batting units on the planet quiver. , another bowler who has challenged perceptions by bowling wrist-spin in an era of finger-spinners, has charted a similar trajectory. When he was making waves in the IPL in the mid-2010s, India were largely content to rely on Ravichandran Ashwin and . His performances, however, forced India to include him, and barring the odd aberration, Chahal hasn’t looked back. Thus, when India arrived on English shores for the ODI series, there was a buzz around what the Men In Blue’s bowlers were capable of. This, lest we forget, was in the backdrop of scoring nearly 500 in an ODI innings against the Netherlands. The journey to the in secondsThe journey to the in 2️⃣5️⃣ seconds But the question always revolved around whether they could repeat their heroics against India. Not just because the Men In Blue are much stronger than Netherlands. But also because they are arguably the gold standard when it comes to ODI bowling attacks. There might be a few who might be wondering what the fuss is all about, considering Bumrah, Chahal and Shami have been around for more than half a decade now, and their displays haven’t suddenly peaked. So, here are some stats that prove why Bumrah, Chahal and Shami featuring together for India against England is, well, a pretty big deal. As things stand, Shami (27.2) has the best strike-rate of all Indian bowlers to have picked up a minimum of 50 wickets in ODI cricket. Chahal (31.2) is third on that particular list – only behind Shami and Amit Mishra. Bumrah (31.4) is fourth and Kuldeep Yadav, who is currently nursing an injury, is fifth (32.3).