logo
"Was blown away to see his energy in last three days": Morne Morkel on Jasprit Bumrah ahead of England Test series

"Was blown away to see his energy in last three days": Morne Morkel on Jasprit Bumrah ahead of England Test series

India Gazettea day ago

London [UK], June 12 (ANI): Ahead of the India tour of England later this month, the visitors' bowling coach and former South African cricketer Morne Morkel was surprised by right-arm seamer Jasprit Bumrah's rhythm and intensity during the three practice sessions that the Indian side has played so far.
India tour of England will take place from June to August 2025, with matches to be played at Headingley (Leeds), Edgbaston (Birmingham), Lord's (London), Old Trafford (Manchester), and The Oval (London).
A new era beckons for India in the Test format as the modern-day giants gear up for their first assignment without the prized batting bigwigs Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli. Shubman Gill, India's youngest Test captain, has taken the baton from Rohit to guide the nation to success and challenge for the World Test Championship mace.
During India's training session in Beckenham, Kent's second home venue, Bumrah displayed his unparalleled mastery in the art of pace bowling. With the ball in his hand, Bumrah showed signs of breaking the notion of requiring assistance from the surface to wreak havoc.
Speaking on Bumrah's bowling, during the press conference on Wednesday, Morkel said as quoted by ESPNcricinfo, 'Bumrah knows how to get himself ready, he knows how to prepare. I was blown away to see the energy on the ball the last three days. That's very exciting to see. I'm happy his body is in good shape at the moment.'
'We'll manage him with that. We'll be smart with him because he's obviously key for us, but in terms of the first three net sessions, lot to be excited watching him bowl with the Dukes ball,' he added.
Bumrah's utilisation will remain limited throughout the five Tests in England. During the announcement of India's squad for the upcoming Test tour of England, chief selector Ajit Agarkar confirmed Bumrah was advised not to contest in consecutive Tests as part of his workload management. The precaution around Bumrah's usage stems from a stress reaction in the back during the fifth Test against Australia in Sydney in January.
He missed India's victory campaign in the Champions Trophy and returned to action for the Mumbai Indians in the recently concluded Indian Premier League (IPL). Before leaving for England, head coach Gautam Gambhir revealed that they have yet to take a call on which Tests India will field Bumrah in the playing XI.
India's Test squad for England series: Shubman Gill (c), Rishabh Pant (vc), Yashasvi Jaiswal, KL Rahul, Sai Sudharsan, Abhimanyu Easwaran, Karun Nair, Nitish Reddy, Ravindra Jadeja, Dhruv Jurel, Washington Sundar, Shardul Thakur, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj, Prasidh Krishna, Akash Deep, Arshdeep Singh, Kuldeep Yadav. (ANI)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Goal disallowed, India lose 1-2 to Argentina for fourth straight defeat in FIH Pro League
Goal disallowed, India lose 1-2 to Argentina for fourth straight defeat in FIH Pro League

The Hindu

time38 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Goal disallowed, India lose 1-2 to Argentina for fourth straight defeat in FIH Pro League

India's late goal from penalty was disallowed in dramatic circumstances and Jugraj Singh failed to score after it was retaken as they lost 1-2 to Argentina for their fourth successive defeat in the European leg of FIH Pro League hockey here on Thursday. Drag-flicker Jugraj struck in the fourth minute off the first penalty corner of the match to give India the lead but Tomas Domene (9th and 49th) scored a brace, both from PCs, to hand Argentina the win. Down 1-2 in the fourth and final quarter, India earned a penalty stroke two minutes from the final hooter and Jugraj was successful in sounding the board. Argentina asked for a video referral on the ground that Jugraj's left foot was well ahead of the ball while he took the stroke. The video umpire ruled in Argentina's favour but India captain Hardik Singh asked the referee to check whether the Argentina goalkeeper Tomas Santiago was already ahead of the goal-line before Jugraj took the stroke. This time, India got a favourable decision from the video umpire. Jugraj was allowed to retake the stroke but his shot was saved this time by Santiago. India's regular captain Harmanpreet Singh missed the game due to a finger tissue injury sustained in the previous match. In his absence, vice-captain Hardik led the team. Argentina got as many as eight PCs while India earned just three. Before the start of the match, the two teams observed a minute's silence to pay respect to the victims of the tragic crash of the London-bound Air India plane carrying 242 passengers and crew in Ahmedabad earlier in the day. Argentina started the game with high pressing and greater ball possession, but India responded with sharp passing and swift circle entries. This early momentum earned India a penalty corner, which Jugraj converted with a powerful drag flick to hand them the lead in the fourth minute. Argentina quickly earned a penalty corner of their own, but Indian goalkeeper Krishan Bahadur Pathak stood tall, making a crucial save. Moments later, Pathak was called into action again, diving to deny another Argentine penalty corner. However, the Argentines got third time lucky as Domene fired home to level the score in the ninth minute. The first quarter ended evenly poised at 1-1. The second quarter saw Argentina pushing forward with early circle entries, but India's defence held firm to thwart their advances. India responded by intercepting passes and launching speedy counter-attacks, putting pressure on Argentina's goalkeeper Santiago, who stood his ground with key saves. Argentina, too, found themselves in promising positions but failed to convert their chances. Despite the end-to-end action, neither side could break the deadlock in the second quarter, and the teams went into half time with the score still level at 1-1. The third quarter saw both teams adopting a cautious approach, focusing on maintaining possession and controlling the tempo of the game. Much of the action unfolded in the midfield, with both India and Argentina finding it difficult to penetrate each other's defensive lines. As a result, clear-cut chances were few and far between, and neither side managed to create any substantial threats in the attacking circle. The evenly contested third quarter ended without any change to the scoreline. Argentina came out strong in the fourth and final quarter, applying relentless pressure on India's defence with aggressive pressing. Their efforts soon bore fruit as Domene struck his second goal of the match in the 49th minute, once again converting a penalty corner to give Argentina a 2-1 lead. Trailing for the first time in the game, India shifted to a long-passing strategy in search of an equaliser. However, Argentina remained compact at the back, successfully absorbing the pressure and denying India any clear breakthroughs. India's best opportunity came in the dying moments when they were awarded a penalty stroke with less than two minutes left on the clock. Jugraj first scored from the stroke, but it was disallowed and he failed to score on the retake. As a result of the loss, India now sit fifth in the points table with 15 points from 12 matches. They will next play against Australia on June 14. India had lost to the same opponents 3-4 on Wednesday. Before that, India had lost 1-2 and 2-3 to Olympic champions Netherlands here during this European tour of the Pro League. This was India's fourth and last match here, and they will now travel to Antwerp in Belgium to face formidable Australia on Saturday.

Double bogey confidence boost helps Lawrence shine at Open
Double bogey confidence boost helps Lawrence shine at Open

Hindustan Times

time2 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Double bogey confidence boost helps Lawrence shine at Open

Not many golfers take confidence from a double bogey but that's exactly what Thriston Lawrence did to bolster himself in Thursday's first round of the US Open at Oakmont. The 28-year-old South African made a double bogey at the par-four ninth hole, dropping him to level par and wiping out his front-nine work. "What gave me confidence is looking at the leaderboard afterward on nine," Lawrence said. "When I made double, I saw I'm still top 10. That sort of made me just realize that you don't lose much when you make bogeys around this golf course." Lawrence followed with a 24-foot birdie putt at the 10th, a five-footer to birdie the par-five 12th and a four-footer for birdie at 17 to shoot a three-under 67 and sit in second place. "I'm playing well," Lawrence said. "I feel like I'm a great driver of the golf ball. I like to work it around." Lawrence played in two DP World Tour events rather than PGA Tour starts recently because he couldn't sort out logistical issues. "Got into Canada, but I couldn't get a Visa. South Africans have to apply 400 days in advance. So I had to apply before I got my card. Bit odd, that," Lawrence said. "I don't like missing events when I get opportunities, but that's the unfortunate thing of having a South African passport." Lawrence said he will always have space in his globetrotting schedule for the European circuit. "Just going back there, I need to play golf, I need to do what I do and work," he said. "In Belgium I finished fourth on a golf course that I know. I've played there two years before that. So that obviously gives you confidence. Here on the PGA Tour every single golf course is new. "If I manage to keep my card this year on the PGA Tour, next year I will feel like all golf courses are familiar. "I feel like I've adapted because I travel all around the world but it just doesn't always work as planned." Lawrence takes travel troubles in stride after 11 years as a pro golfer. "I'm quite of an introvert when it comes to traveling stuff," he said. "As a junior in South Africa you play 35 events, so even as an 8-, 9-year-old I was away every single weekend for golf tournaments. "Homesick, I mean, it's not nice. I would love to be home, but my girlfriend traveling with me, me and my caddie are good mates, my physio as well. So I've got a nice team and enough people to keep me entertained." For now he's making trips rather than basing out of one spot. "It's easy with AirBNB to just book somewhere and just go wherever you want and not get attached," he said. "It would be nice to get something, but I'm not yet sure where that is for now." js/rcw

Cummins and Carey shine as Australia remain on top in WTC final despite collapse
Cummins and Carey shine as Australia remain on top in WTC final despite collapse

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Cummins and Carey shine as Australia remain on top in WTC final despite collapse

Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Australia captain Pat Cummins starred with the ball and Alex Carey made valuable runs following a dramatic collapse as the holders retained the advantage in the World Test Championship final against South Africa on bowler Cummins produced a sensational spell of four wickets for one run, sparking South Africa's collapse to 138 all out on the second day in reply to Australia's first innings total of 212 at Lord' collapsed to 73-7 in their second innings, with Kagiso Rabada (3-44) and Lungi Ngidi (3-35) doing the bulk of the Carey (43) and Mitchell Starc (16 not out) shared an eighth-wicket partnership of 61 before the wicketkeeper was lbw to Rabada shortly before the last over of the day saw Starc dropped on 14 when Marco Jansen shelled a routine catch off Wiaan stumps Australia were 144-8, a potentially decisive lead of 218 runs.A remarkable 28 wickets fell in two days on a pitch which, while offering some assistance to the quicks, was by no means a match scheduled for five days, could now finish before the end of the third."In England when it's overcast, the ball seems to do a bit more," Starc told the BBC."Everyone is quick to jump on the batters but you've got to notice the good bowling from both sides."Ngidi, meanwhile, insisted South Africa were still in the game."It's in the balance right now," he said. "Two wickets in hand, if we can knock those over and maybe chase 225, people are going to get their money's worth."Rabada, who had taken 5-51 in the first innings, tormented Australia again with two wickets in the 11th had Usman Khawaja caught behind for six and, two balls later, removed Cameron Green for a duck following the number three's four in the first continued to tumble after quick Jansen had Marnus Labuschagne, in his first Test as an opener, caught behind for Australia's 44-3 became 48-4 next over when Beau Webster, who top-scored in Australia's first innings with 72, fell lbw to Ngidi.- 'Led from the front' -Australia were reeling at 73-7 after Cummins was bowled off his pad by an excellent Ngidi Carey and Starc led a defiant response that kept their side on course to retain the Cummins finished with figures of 6-28 as he reached 300 career Test wickets and secured a coveted place on the Lord's honours board with a five-wicket haul."He does it time and time again," said Starc of Cummins. "He led from the front before he was captain and now as captain as well."The quality and skills he has in his pocket -- I'm thrilled for him to get a bagful. To go to 300 is a special effort."South Africa lost their last five wickets for 12 runs as Cummins ripped through the batting South Africa captain Temba Bavuma (36) and David Bedingham (45) offered meaningful resistance during a fifth-wicket stand of lunch, Cummins struck four times in a mere 17 balls of devastating pace Africa had resumed on Thursday at 43-4, battling to put enough runs on the who faced 37 balls for his overnight three not out, changed gears with a lofted cover-drive for four off left-arm quick Starc before pulling Cummins for had his revenge, however, when Bavuma's checked drive was brilliantly caught at cover by a diving then dismissed Kyle Verreynne lbw for 13 and, three balls later, held a simple return catch as Jansen fell for a Australia skipper ended the innings with his 300th Test wicket, Rabada well caught low down at deep square leg by Beau Webster.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store