logo
IND vs ENG 3rd Test: 'Something I can tell my son when he is grown up' Jasprit Bumrah on getting name on Lord's Honours Boards

IND vs ENG 3rd Test: 'Something I can tell my son when he is grown up' Jasprit Bumrah on getting name on Lord's Honours Boards

Time of India12-07-2025
Jasprit Bumrah earned his name on the Lord's Honours Boards after a five-wicket haul against England in the third Test. (Image: X/BCCI)
India pace bowler
Jasprit Bumrah
achieved a significant milestone by securing his place on the Honours Boards after claiming a five-wicket haul against England in the ongoing third Test match of the five-match series at Lord's Cricket Ground in London on Friday.
His exceptional bowling performance helped India restrict England to 387 runs in their first innings, while India finished Day 2 at 145/3.
Bumrah's journey to the five-wicket haul began on the opening day when he dismissed Harry Brook. He continued his impressive form on the second day, claiming four more crucial wickets including Ben Stokes, Joe Root, Chris Woakes, and Jofra Archer, completing his fifer and earning his place on the prestigious Lord's Honours Boards.
In a video shared by the BCCI, Bumrah returned to the dressing room with hugs all around. He then signed a pair of shoes for the Lord's museum.
Speaking to
BBC Test Match Special
in the UK, Bumrah said, "It feels really special because we don't come here very often. We don't play a lot of Test matches here. We come here maybe every four years. So you never know how many matches you'll get to play here. As a child, you've seen a lot of Test cricket played here.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
An engineer reveals: One simple trick to get internet without a subscription
Techno Mag
Learn More
Undo
So now being on the honours board feels good."
Instead of excessive celebrations after reaching the milestone, Bumrah opted to go about his business. He later revealed he is taking it one game at a time and saving those stories for his son Angad's grown-up years.
'Reality is I was tired. I can't jump around like a 21-year-old. I was happy that I contributed. The name on the Honours board feels good. It is something I can tell my son about when he is grown up,' said Bumrah who was rested for the Edgbaston Test due to workload management.
The Indian bowling attack showed a collective effort with Mohammed Siraj and Nitish Kumar Reddy supporting Bumrah with two wickets each. Siraj removed Jamie Smith (51) and Brydon Carse (56), while Reddy dismissed England's opening pair of Zak Crawley (18) and Ben Duckett (23) on day one.
Ravindra Jadeja contributed to the bowling effort by taking the important wicket of Ollie Pope, who scored 44 runs before his dismissal.
Jasprit Bumrah press conference: Hits out at critics, on Lord's Honours Boards, ball controversy
In response to England's first innings total, India faced early setbacks in their batting innings. Jofra Archer, returning to the English lineup, struck early by dismissing Yashasvi Jaiswal for 13 runs.
The Indian innings faced further pressure when captain Shubman Gill was dismissed by Chris Woakes for 16 runs, followed by Karun Nair's dismissal by England captain Ben Stokes for 40 runs.
KL Rahul and Rishabh Pant steadied the Indian innings, remaining unbeaten at the end of day two with scores of 53 and 19 runs, respectively.
Their partnership helped India reach 145 for the loss of three wickets.
The series stands evenly balanced at 1-1, with England winning the first Test at Headingley and India securing a historic victory at Edgbaston. The third Test at Lord's represents a crucial junction in the series as both teams aim to take the lead.
Catch Manika Batra's inspiring story on Game On, Episode 3. Watch Here!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

"No Message Or Anything": Yuzvendra Chahal Reveals His Last Conversation With Ex-Wife Dhanashree Verma
"No Message Or Anything": Yuzvendra Chahal Reveals His Last Conversation With Ex-Wife Dhanashree Verma

NDTV

time7 minutes ago

  • NDTV

"No Message Or Anything": Yuzvendra Chahal Reveals His Last Conversation With Ex-Wife Dhanashree Verma

Indian cricket team spinner Yuzvendra Chahal has opened up on his relation with his ex-wife Dhanashree Verma, who is an actor-choreographer, in a recent podcast. Chahal and Dhanashree were granted divorce by the Mumbai family court in March this year, ending their five-year marriage. The duo tied the knot in December 2020 but as per their petition, they separated in June 2022. In February this year, the couple filed a joint petition before the family court seeking divorce by mutual consent. Now, Chahal has revealed that he has not texted or talked to Dhanashree for a long time now. He added that after 2024 T20 World Cup, the couple was left with formal talks only. "I had not seen her for a very long time, and then I saw her on a video call, where the lawyers spoke to us. That's it, no message or anything after that. Before the divorce, we weren't on talking terms for six to seven months. We would talk only if there was something very important; otherwise, nothing. It was like that for a while, but after the T20 World Cup, it started properly," said Chahal on Raj Shamani 's YouTube channel. When asked who started the talks of divoce between the two. Chahal said, "She brought it up at times, even I did on some occasions, and it happened one day mutually." Asked if there was any chance to work it out, Chahal said, "No, we tried enough. I tried my best." The divorce case of Chahal and Dhanashree grabbed headlines with scrutiny into both of their lives and the spinner spoke openly about his mental health struggles during the phase. Chahal made it clear that he never cheated on Dhanashree despite many rumours about him. He also said that they kept their separation a secret from the world till their divorce was finalised. "It was going on for a long while. We decided we do not want to show the people. Who knew if it did not happen. Maybe, it will become a different scenario. We were like until we reached to a point of end, we are not going to say anything. We will be like a normal couple on social media," Chahal said.

PCB Takes Stunning Decision After 'India-Pakistan' Controversy In WCL 2025
PCB Takes Stunning Decision After 'India-Pakistan' Controversy In WCL 2025

NDTV

time7 minutes ago

  • NDTV

PCB Takes Stunning Decision After 'India-Pakistan' Controversy In WCL 2025

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has put a ban on using the name of the country in teams representing it in private cricket leagues following the fiasco in the World Championships of Legends (WCL) in which Indian players refused to play against the 'Pakistan Champions'. According to a report in Telecom Asia Sport( the PCB has decided to pull the plug on the use of the country's name in private cricket leagues after the ongoing WCL in the UK was made out to be a clash between India and Pakistan. 'The decision was taken after a detailed discussion in the Board of Directors meeting on Thursday,' sources told on Friday. 'The high-level authorities felt Indian players refusing to play Pakistan in the WCL's second edition twice is hurtful to the name of the country.' In the future, no permission will be given to any private organization to use the name of the country for private leagues. However, the current Pakistan Legends team will be allowed to play Saturday's final against South Africa. The reports said that various private organisations have used the name of Pakistan to feature in minor and low-profile leagues in Zimbabwe, Kenya, and the USA. 'All private organizations will face legal action in case they use Pakistan's name. PCB has the sole right to allow its use for cricket events if it finds the authenticity of the League and the organization as reputable,' the report quoted sources close to the PCB as saying. It is also learnt that the Pakistan government and the IPC (Inter-provincial coordination committee), which is looking after the sports in the country, has sent an advisory to the PCB to control the use of the country's name in private cricket leagues in the future. (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

The heart, heat and craft that make Mohammed Siraj, India's marathon man in the England series
The heart, heat and craft that make Mohammed Siraj, India's marathon man in the England series

Indian Express

time7 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

The heart, heat and craft that make Mohammed Siraj, India's marathon man in the England series

There was this nice little moment after Mohammed Siraj, in his follow through, had failed to hold on to a booming straight drive by Harry Brook just after tea. Siraj seemed hurt as he tried to shake-off the pain by jerking his hand. A worried captain Shubman Gill, from mid-on, ran towards his injured bowler and accompanied him till his run-up. He walked with him, held his hand and massaged his fingers. No one knows the importance of Siraj to this side more than the skipper. On his hand depended India's fortunes and it was the magic in those long skilful fingers that kept India in the game and could help the skipper write a new chapter in Indian cricket. The pace spearhead and the world's best new-ball bowler Jasprit Bumrah had sat out of this Test. The BCCI, this morning, informed that he was released from the squad. But there was Siraj around, bowling his heart out, to ensure that his senior wasn't missed. In an inspired spell around mid-day, he cherrypicked England's two most solid batsmen and put them on his plate. The wickets of Ollie Pope (22) and Joe Root (29)— the two seasoned hands with a reputation of being game-changers in low-scoring games—went a long way in restricting England. When Root was around, England were within touching distance of the Indian score. At 175/4, India's 224 didn't look too far. Siraj ensured it was, England finished at 247, getting a 23-run lead. Prasidh Krishna put on a commendable shift too, registering his best figures (4/62) under intense scrutiny. This was followed by a bizarre phase of play. India batted for 18 overs and scored 75/2 runs, mustering a lead of 52 runs. Yashasvi Jaiswal (unbeaten 51) was dropped twice and Sai Sudharsan (11) once. No such favour was extended to KL Rahul, who was caught in slips (7). There have been a couple of recurring themes from this Test series. Whenever a team seems to be running away with the game, it gets religiously dragged back. However big a star was, the Indian team hasn't missed them. Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and now Bumrah. On a day of 16 wickets, the pendulum keeps swinging either side but keeps coming back to the state of equilibrium and new leaders keep emerging. After the Indians had finally seen the backs of the two England openers Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley – their 'hit some, miss some' ending in around 20 overs – England were again regrouping. On the lively pitch, Duckett and Crawley would have known that they don't have the patience or skills to last long. But Pope and Root were equipped to play for long, bat India out of the game. Enter Siraj who pushed England's top two out off their perch and dragged India back in the game. He didn't have a fiver to his name but his 4/86 would get ranked among his best. Siraj is a bowler that is difficult to straight-jacket. Is he a seam or swing bowler? His big wicket-taking ball is the nip-backer that got him the wickets of Pope and Root. But his other two wickets on the day— Jacob Bethell and Brook—were because of that big banana swing he is blessed with. The swinging yorker that got all-rounder Bethell, the dangerous floater with reputed T20 credentials and Bazball bravado, could well go down as the 'ball of the match'. It might not have the speed of a Waqar Younis special that damages the toe but it has the late tailing movement that does the same. The sting of a real yorker can be measured by how far the bat is from the ball when it hits the pad. In Bethell's case it was quite far. It was a clear indicator that the ball had moved in too sharply and deviously late. Siraj dismissed Brook too with a swinging ball that hit the bottom part of the bat and stung the stumps. His final wicket came late but it was his second session spell that turned the game one more time in this topsy-turvy series. Siraj had a nightmarish first spell. Openers Duckett and Crawley were slamming and slapping his balls for four and even scooping for a six. He went for 31 runs in four overs. It was Duckett's scoop six that made Shubman take him off the attack. Siraj returned to bowl once the openers had returned to the pavilion. In the first spell, he didn't seem to have any rhythm. But there is something enduring about Siraj's attitude. Even on his worst days, he doesn't give up. The 20 overs, fielding on the fence, something stirred in Siraj. His big spell was about those 'effort balls'. There are subtle signs that a deadly punch is on the way. Siraj's stride has extra bounce and there is more 'shoulder' in the ball. This makes the ball dart in menacingly. Thumbs up to the current 𝙡𝙚𝙖𝙙𝙞𝙣𝙜 𝙬𝙞𝙘𝙠𝙚𝙩 𝙩𝙖𝙠𝙚𝙧 of the #ENGvIND series 🔥#WTC27 📝: — ICC (@ICC) August 1, 2025 A sting of a real nip-backer can be measured by position of the beaten batsman on the crease and where at what point the ball hits the pad. Pope couldn't decide if he had to be on the front-foot or stay back. He was caught in the crease as the ball sneaked in between the bat and front pad to hit the back one. The captain was lbw and Siraj was celebrating. Root too could get caught in the 'no man's land' and he was out lbw. Siraj had justified the role of the pace spearhead and fulfilled the responsibility he was burdened with. It is something he loves. Statistics show whenever Bumrah has not played, Siraj has emerged as a better and more successful bowler. At a recent press conference, he was reminded about this statistic and he said: 'Jab mujhe responsibility milta hai, muje proud feel hota ha. Mai apni country ke liye responsibility le raha hu. (When I get responsibility, I feel proud that I am taking responsibility for my country).' 'In that case, you wish he doesn't play?' – joked a reporter. Siraj smiled and said, 'No, no Jassi bhai hone se bahut acha hota (No, no it's great to have Jassi bhai).' So again is Siraj a seam or swing bowler? He is a bowler with a sturdy heart and robust shoulder.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store