Traditional, predictable, lethal: how Jasprit Bumrah ruled the World Cup with his slower ball
His old-style offcutter was not a defensive tool in the tournament but a prime weapon
Osman Samiuddin
At ESPNcricinfo we write and talk a lot about slower balls. A lot. There's probably more written about them than there are variations of them. We included two slower balls in our Balls of the Century list a few years ago - even though it was a Test-only compilation.
We began this tournament with a wonderful interview with Ian Harvey, one of the great slower-ball bowlers from the turn of the century. We discovered that Marco Jansen had developed a new one that wasn't a knuckleball or released from deep in the palm but one that was in between (nope, me neither). We celebrated Lungi Ngidi, one of the best modern practitioners, who bowls so many he should be re-categorised as the first Right-Arm Slow-Fast bowler. Sam Curran let us in on a few secrets about his now-you-hit-me-now-you-don't moonball, so slow and loopy, it should be called Droopy (as in the dog).
We're post-hoc now, but clearly, we did it with good reason. After all, this T20 World Cup saw a greater percentage of pace-off balls from seam bowlers (15.88% or nearly one in six) than any of the last four editions did. What all this coverage, all the deeper insight, the greater frequency of it, has done actually is to underline the utilitarianism of the slower ball in modern cricket. It is now, in the main, a tool of the proletariat, designed to slow - not repel - the onslaught of the ruling class, a bowling slingshot against an armada of modern batting weaponry. The slower ball is merely one small part in the sequence with which every bowler hopes to get out of an over minimising further damage.
And yet over the last few days, through the wrists and mind of Jasprit Bumrah, we've been able to witness - I'm tempted to say rediscover - the slower ball afresh. The slower ball as a shiny new toy, a weapon, a gamechanger. The slower ball like it was back in the mid-'80s, Steve Waugh and Simon O'Donnell looping them out the back of their hands and unto the wider, confounded world.
Now, you can't help but feel for them. One of the most commonly cited challenges of facing Bumrah is that he hits the bat much quicker than batters expect, based on cues from his run-up and action. Which is understandable, because he ambles in like a slightly rushed Mohinder Amarnath. So batters such as Brook and Ravindra train themselves to be ready that first ball to account for the vast discrepancy between what looks like it might be coming and what actually does.
So when he starts with a slower ball - usually mid-70s mph and reflective of the very cues batters have trained themselves to disregard - it's like he's throwing a Christopher Nolan script at them, an intricate deception inside a grander, more elaborate deception. Perhaps, in today's world, the more apposite reference to apply here is Winston Churchill's famous quote about Russia's intentions just as a world war was breaking out, that it was a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma; or, even more germane to our times, that this was Bumrah playing 3D chess.
I liked the one to dismiss Mitchell Santner in the final. The game was long gone by then. Santner knew Bumrah would be bowling slower ones - he had pred
Indeed, one of the more illustrative bits of data from this tournament is that in matches where 390-plus runs were scored - pancake-flat decks - Bumrah's slower balls averaged less than 7, with an economy of 6. Slower balls from all the other bowlers in those games - including some very handy ones - averaged just under 14, with an economy upwards of 20.
That's not even the wildest thing about his slower ball. That would be that he only bowls one kind of slower ball. Just one. No split-finger release. No knuckleball. No backhander. Batters don't have to guess or anticipate which one he'll pull out. He's only got the one, which has fetched him all these wickets, as well as all his other great deliveries, and which is the most bog standard of all the slower balls, the most utilitarian: the humble offcutter. It's the one you get free without the subscription; the one most self-respecting fast bowlers will not even put down on their CVs because it's not some special skill. The one literally all of us can bowl because we can all turn a doorknob.
Except, of course, literally none of us can bowl it like Bumrah, because he's not turning a doorknob, he's yanking it right off with the snap of a wrist. He's bowling slower-ball offcutters like Murali bowled offbreaks. That's how much action he gets on it, allowing him grip and turn and also, when he goes fuller, that wicked, deceptive dip (the snap of his wrist already does all kinds of weird, wonderful and science-y things to his pace-on balls, explained lucidly here by Himanish Ganjoo, so you can only imagine what an equally snappy rip across the side of the ball for an offcutter might do).
Which is the other thing that stands him apart, the numerous ways his one, single slower ball can hurt. He can hit a length or back of one, and make batters look silly, as Ryan Rickleton and Roston Chase discovered in this tournament. Or he can drop a yorker at the base of the stumps, which did for New Zealand's lower order in the final. That control over length - the hardest bit about slower balls according to Curran - is absolute.
It's all done with no discernible change in grip, in the action or in his arm speed. For viewers, it's often impossible to be sure that he's bowled one at all, at least until the speed gun confirms it. More often than not, those facing him are in exactly the same boat.
ominantly bowled pace-off through the final and had bowled that slower, dipping yorker two balls earlier. Santner had kept that one out and smiled at Bumrah knowingly. Santner always looks knowing and has a nice smile, but a fat lot of good that did him as he hacked at this slower, dipping yorker so early he may as well have been at the breakfast buffet with Bumrah bowling him dinner.
This was not magic. Everyone saw it coming. This was a glorified nets session. Here's the field, here's what's coming. Keep it out if you can. This was the simple, brutal reality of one athlete asserting his undeniable superiority over the other, and not just over but pretty much everyone else on that field. Bumrah said post-game that watching New Zealand bowl, he realised on a belter like that, pace had to be taken off. Easier said than done: New Zealand collectively conceded 90 off their 31 pace-off deliveries. Bumrah conceded 12 off his 21.
Indeed, one of the more illustrative bits of data from this tournament is that in matches where 390-plus runs were scored - pancake-flat decks - Bumrah's slower balls averaged less than 7, with an economy of 6. Slower balls from all the other bowlers in those games - including some very handy ones - averaged just under 14, with an economy upwards of 20.
That's not even the wildest thing about his slower ball. That would be that he only bowls one kind of slower ball. Just one. No split-finger release. No knuckleball. No backhander. Batters don't have to guess or anticipate which one he'll pull out. He's only got the one, which has fetched him all these wickets, as well as all his other great deliveries, and which is the most bog standard of all the slower balls, the most utilitarian: the humble offcutter. It's the one you get free without the subscription; the one most self-respecting fast bowlers will not even put down on their CVs because it's not some special skill. The one literally all of us can bowl because we can all turn a doorknob.
Except, of course, literally none of us can bowl it like Bumrah, because he's not turning a doorknob, he's yanking it right off with the snap of a wrist. He's bowling slower-ball offcutters like Murali bowled offbreaks. That's how much action he gets on it, allowing him grip and turn and also, when he goes fuller, that wicked, deceptive dip (the snap of his wrist already does all kinds of weird, wonderful and science-y things to his pace-on balls, explained lucidly here by Himanish Ganjoo, so you can only imagine what an equally snappy rip across the side of the ball for an offcutter might do).
Which is the other thing that stands him apart, the numerous ways his one, single slower ball can hurt. He can hit a length or back of one, and make batters look silly, as Ryan Rickleton and Roston Chase discovered in this tournament. Or he can drop a yorker at the base of the stumps, which did for New Zealand's lower order in the final. That control over length - the hardest bit about slower balls according to Curran - is absolute.
It's all done with no discernible change in grip, in the action or in his arm speed. For viewers, it's often impossible to be sure that he's bowled one at all, at least until the speed gun confirms it. More often than not, those facing him are in exactly the same boat.