
'Bumrah Bowled From The Wrong End, Kamboj Shouldn't Have Taken The New Ball'
The former Australia captain felt India's Jasprit Bumrah bowled from the "wrong end" during Day 2 of the Manchester Test versus England.
Ricky Ponting tore into the Indian bowling attack and didn't even spare the great Jasprit Bumrah after a flop-show from the tourists on Day 2 of the Manchester Test against England. The Australian legend felt Bumrah's tactics were off on a day where the Bazball brigade was in its element and exercised dominance on an Indian side that regularly lost its lines, erring on both sides of the wicket.
On a surface that changed its colours after the sun sneaked through the dark clouds that hovered over Old Trafford for most of India's batting effort, England openers Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley raced to an opening stand of 166 in response to the visitors' 358 all out.
While Crawley hammered a resurgent 84 off 113 balls, Duckett nearly pulled off a century, being dismissed on 94 off just 100 deliveries.
England coasted to 225/2 by stumps.
Even pace ace Bumrah lacked his usual venom with the new ball.
Bumrah recovered and delivered an encouraging second spell late in the day, but still ended with no wickets for 37.
Ponting felt Bumrah had bowled from the 'wrong end" for most of his spell.
Sky Sports.
Young Anshul Kamboj (1/48) showed nerves of a Test debut, before Mohammed Siraj (0/58) and Shardul Thakur (0/35) emerged expensive and ordinary, forcing skipper Shubman Gill to use left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja (1/37) for an extended spell just to regain some control.
Jadeja got rid of Crawley to bring India back in the contest. Soon Kamboj got Duckett edging a wide one to wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel.
'They got scored off on both sides of the wicket, didn't they? You know, we broadly talked then about how they bowled to (Ollie) Pope. I think they were tactically off as well. I don't think Kamboj should have taken the new ball. Yeah, I didn't like that from the start. And he was, I mean, and Duckett's five of his first six boundaries were behind square leg side. So they got it tactically wrong there," Ponting said.
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