
Gautam Gambhir in firing line for handling of Jasprit Bumrah for England Tests: 'Why was it not kept a secret?'
Before the Test series against England even began, it was known that pacer Jasprit Bumrah would be playing just three matches in the five-Test series due to his workload management. However, with the ace speedster performing exceptionally well in the first innings of the Headingley Test, where he took five wickets, there were calls for Bumrah to play all five Tests, which would give India the best chance of winning the series. However, after the loss in Leeds, India head coach Gautam Gambhir confirmed there would be no change in plans and the 31-year-old would indeed play just three Tests. India head coach Gautam Gambhir questioned over 'lack of secrecy' surrounding Jasprit Bumrah(HT_PRINT)
Former India opening batter Aakash Chopra has now questioned the Indian head coach over the 'lack of secrecy' surrounding Bumrah, asking why there was a need to let the opposition know about their plans, as one could have kept Ben Stokes and co guessing about the pacer's availability.
Bumrah was the pick of the Indian bowlers in the first innings of the Headingley Test as he returned with five wickets, helping the visitors gain a six-run lead. However, he went wicketless in the second innings, and this was the main reason behind India letting England chase down 371 to gain a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.
'Bumrah said he will play three matches only, and I am thinking whether it was required to publicise it. Why was it not kept a secret? We don't announce our team as well. So why was it necessary to reiterate it repeatedly before the start of the tour that he would play three matches only? Let them guess. You play whichever Tests you wish,' Chopra said on his YouTube channel.
Also Read: Jasprit Bumrah set to skip 2nd Test despite week-long gap
'You have played one, and you know you can play only two of the remaining four matches, which is not a good thing. If you play the second as well, you will play one of three. So, suddenly, the opposition gets into a great frame of mind that Bumrah, your biggest strength, is also not there. You can prepare pitches accordingly,' he added. Bumrah might miss the second Test at Edgbaston
According to a report in the Indian Express, Jasprit Bumrah is likely to miss the second Test against England in Edgbaston as the team management looks to manage his workload. The pacer is expected to be back in action for the third Test at the Lord's Cricket Ground.
However, if Bumrah indeed misses the second Test, the visitors risk going 0-2 down, as Mohammed Siraj and Prasidh Krishna's performance left much to be desired in Headingley.
Chopra reckons there is a dire need to create a crop of fast bowlers as uncertainty looms large over both Bumrah and Mohammed Shami.
"The next generation of Indian fast bowlers will have to be prepared. It's a serious issue. There were two important pillars of India's good performance away from home. One was batters starting to score runs, but it doesn't work out with that, as you need to pick up 20 wickets. So Mohammad Shami and Mohammed Siraj were outstanding with Jasprit Bumrah," said Chopra.
'I also remember Ishant Sharma and Bhuvneshwar Kumar's Lord's Test. When there are doubts about Bumrah's availability, who will take the responsibility going forward, because Mohammad Shami, I think that story is not over, but it is close to an ending. Mohammed Siraj is good, but he hasn't reached the rank of Bumrah or Shami,' he added.

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Indian Express
8 minutes ago
- Indian Express
IND vs ENG: Three key factors for India's England turnaround – ‘Control, Kuldeep and batting advantage', says Sanjay Bangar
India's hapless five-wicket defeat to England in Headingley undid a heavy body of good work laid down by the top-order batters and pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah earlier this week. While the side put on 300-plus runs in both innings, India's weaknesses were exposed by Ben Stokes and Co on muliple fronts, including all three departments. While India struck five centuries with Rishabh Pant (2), captain Shubman Gill, KL Rahul and Yashasvi Jaiswal coming to the fore, the sorry lower-order collapses meant India could not capitalise on their batting advantages. With an erratic seam attack behind him, even the menacing Bumrah could not do much when the English batters went on the aggressive in a record 371 chase. India dropped as many as eight catches in the field across two innings, further handing the advantage to England to take the lead in the five-match series. Former India batting coach Sanjay Bangar listed three major factors where India will need to work on for an immediate turnaround in the series. Ahead of the second Test starting Wednesday in Edgbaston, Bangar said the visitors will need to minimise collapses after getting a start with the bat. 'When you have an advantage batting first or third, try to put the match out of the opposition's reach. In both innings of the first Test India had the opportunity but could not do that due to which England chased the target they got,' he said on Sta Sports. A post shared by Star Sports India (@starsportsindia) Bangar also stressed on bringing left-arm spinner Kuldeep Yadav into the XI. No wrist-spinner has played a Test in England against the hosts in the last four years, but Bangar believes Kuldeep can pick on England's weakness against the tribe. 'The team will have to think a bit on how to bring in Kuldeep Yadav. Given the approach we saw from England's batters in the first innings, Kuldeep Yadav being a wrist-spinner, the English batters have not done well often against wrist-spin,' Bangar remarked. The former India all-rounder also emphasised that the team will need to focus on improving the control in the pace department after the profligate outings for the pacers behind Bumrah at Leeds. Seamer Prasidh Krishna tallied 5/225 in the Test, with no pace bowler having ever conceded more runs at a worse economy in history. 'The third thing to see is how the fast bowling attack can give more control. Many bowlers conceded runs in excess of five runs or more per over in the first Test. That does not give the control captain and Bumrah who bowled well from one end did not get enough support either.'


India Today
19 minutes ago
- India Today
ENG vs IND: Without Jasprit Bumrah, can India win a Test in Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy?
Back in the early '90s, television sets across India would flicker off the moment Sachin Tendulkar was dismissed. Such is the hold Jasprit Bumrah now exerts over the Indian Test team. It's been 'Bumrah or bust' for a side staring down the barrel of transition sooner than the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in Australia in 2024-25, it was, for the most part, Bumrah against the Aussies over five grinding Tests. And when he broke down in the final clash, India's hopes of salvaging the series vanished with to June, and Indian cricket fans' worst fears are beginning to stir. Bumrah is set to miss the second Test of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy against England. Despite piling up over 800 runs in the opener at Leeds-and with Bumrah snaring a five-for-India still lost. Now, with a Bazballing England looming in Birmingham, the prospect of facing them without their spearhead is unnerving, to say the least. If reports are accurate, Bumrah, originally signed up for just three of the five Tests, will sit out the Edgbaston clash-even with a week's break between the games. India, after all, must protect its Kohinoor. It's about workload management now for arguably the world's best fast bowler, one with a history of fragility. After all, he has bowled 1,482 overs since his debut-the most by any Indian bowler in that span, by a country Friday, India trained for over four hours at Edgbaston. Bumrah was present but didn't bowl. Though not officially ruled out, all signs point to his absence: a clear pivot in training towards other seamers ahead of the Birmingham since the Border-Gavaskar series of 2021 has one player's availability overshadowed all other subplots. Then, the question was how India would cope without Virat Kohli, available for only one of five Tests. Now, it's whether they can survive two without Bumrah-especially after the gutting loss in the series that brings us to the core question: can India win an overseas Test without Jasprit Bumrah? While many cricket romantics would swiftly say no, pointing to the glaring overdependence exposed at Headingley, let's turn to the numbers before India take the field at first, a quick detour: Did India err in openly declaring that Bumrah would play only three of the five Tests? Even if pre-planned, why hand England the tactical edge on a silver platter? There's no Mohammed Shami. Mohammed Siraj looks out of rhythm. And the rest of the pace group haven't bowled a single Test over in FRONTLINE PACERS WITHOUT BUMRAHMohammed Siraj - 37 TestsadvertisementAkash Deep - 7 TestsPrasidh Krishna - 4 TestsArshdeep Singh - Yet to debutRemove Bumrah, and the experience of this young seam group is effectively halved. Siraj is the de facto senior, but his form-particularly in red-ball cricket-has been patchy at best. Akash Deep, despite promise, has mostly played at home. Prasidh was expensive in Leeds, and Arshdeep has yet to earn his reading, isn't it?Bumrah's impact, especially overseas, has been monumental since his red-ball debut in 2018. India have played 26 Tests without him in this time-and won 18. But zoom in on foreign soil, and the numbers dip. Narrow it further to SENA countries (South Africa, England, New Zealand, Australia), and the struggle becomes clearer. Since Bumrah's debut, India's overseas wins without him have come only in Bangladesh (2022), the West Indies (thanks largely to R Ashwin's 12-wicket haul on a turning Dominica track in 2023), and the miracle of Gabba in data makes it plain: when Bumrah plays, India win more. advertisementNow consider this: before Bumrah's arrival, India had won just 18 of their 113 overseas Tests in SENA. Post his debut, that win percentage has doubled! Telling, isn't it?India will look to Brisbane 2021 for hope. That epic series finale saw them field a pace attack held together by tape and belief. No Bumrah. No Ashwin. Siraj-just two Tests old-led the line. Navdeep Saini played his second, and T Natarajan, flown in as a net bowler, was handed his debut. And yet, they took 20 wickets. Under Rahane's calm leadership, they rode Sydney's resilience into Brisbane's Birmingham 2024 is no Brisbane aren't playing traditional Test cricket. Under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum, they've turned chasing 350+ into routine. Don't forget, it was at this very ground in 2022 that England chased down 379-against a Bumrah-led Bumrah is ruled out, you can bet England will gleefully shave off even the slimmest blade of grass from the surface. They'll back their batting muscle and pile pressure on India's raw pace it a foregone conclusion then?Not necessarily-if India get their combination Leeds, India opted for Shardul Thakur as the fifth bowler alongside Jadeja. It was an attacking move, as they picked a bowling all-rounder over Nitish Kumar Reddy. But the selection of Prasidh Krishna-a hit-the-deck bowler-over a natural swing option may have backfired in English Bumrah's absence, India could consider the likes of Akash Deep or Arshdeep Singh-both more attuned to swinging the red Duke ball. Or, they might even throw in Kuldeep Yadav as a second spinners in England? Sounds risky-but not all, cricketing greats like Sunil Gavaskar and Sourav Ganguly have long preached picking your five best bowlers, not just horses for courses. And consider this: Ashwin took seven wickets at Edgbaston in 2018 in a narrow defeat. And long before him, legendary Shane Warne turned Edgbaston pitches into theatres of slow, spinning torment. Even Nathan Lyon has 20 wickets in three Tests India dare to play both Jadeja and Kuldeep in Birmingham?And if Bumrah is to miss two Tests in this series, what are the ideal venues for his rest?Let's examine the historical balance of spin versus pace at the four remaining grounds-Edgbaston, Lord's, Old Trafford and The Oval. If it's purely a numbers game, Edgbaston and The Oval might seem the best bets to rest him. But even with the data, the picture looks dim for there's room for optimism. As Gautam Gambhir said ahead of the series: "I have said it before during the Champions Trophy [which Bumrah missed and India won] as well-it will give someone the opportunity to put his hand up. We have enough talent there. I know he is quality, but we've got quality beyond him too."India will need belief, bold calls, and a touch of while Jasprit Bumrah might not walk out at Edgbaston, India still must.- Ends


Time of India
20 minutes ago
- Time of India
IND vs ENG: 'Too many captains…' — Ex-India spinner blames KL Rahul, Rishabh Pant for chaos at Headingley
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