Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Australia's mission: how to dismantle Bumrah's genius
The Guardian
|November 28, 2024
India's supreme fast bowler destroyed top order in Perth and hosts have little time to avoid a second Test repeat
Test cricket is supposed to be cruel. This is a key aspect of its beauty. This thing hurts. It will seek out your weakest points and then very carefully and skilfully gouge its nails into the wound. But is it meant to be this cruel?
There was something tender, painful and even a little disturbing about what Jasprit Bumrah did to Marnus Labuschagne during the first Border-Gavaskar Test in Perth. In the space of 23 Bumrah deliveries Labuschagne was dropped, hit in the ribs, beaten five times, left scoreless, and basically de-cricketed, reduced to a series of formless movements, stabbing at the ball like an under-gardener swatting midges in the dark.
Eventually he was dismissed lbw, not playing a shot. By that point he may as well have had a baguette in his hand. If there is some comfort for Australia's No 3 in all this then, well, at least he wasn't alone.
As Australia stumble, a little bruised and fractious, into the 10-day break between Perth and the second Test in Adelaide it is probably worth scrolling back through every ball of Bumrah's new-ball spell on day one. First because Australia's top order looked utterly spooked, unable to read any of the lines, angles or movement. But mainly because it was basically a piece of art.
Australia seemed ahead of the game as the openers began their reply to India's doomed-looking 154. At which point Bumrah decided something else was going to happen, setting off on that familiar stuttering run, a man riding an imaginary horse, coconut halves clopping. With six paces to go he still looks like he's about to bowl off-breaks.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 28, 2024-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Guardian
The Guardian
Money hacks Six ways to pick the right plastic for you
When you apply for a credit card or personal loan, the lender will quote interest as the annual percentage rate (APR).
4 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
Peak Prado Is Spain’s national museum too busy for its own good?
Diego Velázquez was to be found yesterday in the familiar pose he has held for the past 370 years, brush in one hand, palette in the other, staring out from the huge canvas of Las Meninas.
3 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
Back my Greenland plans or face tariffs, says Trump
Donald Trump threatened yesterday to impose tariffs on countries that did not \"go along\" with his plan to annex Greenland, increasing pressure on European allies who have opposed his effort to take over the Arctic territory.
3 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
Jeff in Venice Bezos wedding tours a huge hit six months after big day
For the residents of Venice who travel daily through the city’s waterways, the small wooden floating jetty outside the Gritti Palace hotel is nothing special, “no different to a London underground stop”, as Igor Scomparin, a tour guide, puts it.
3 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
HMRC taking more than a year to pay money back
Some people are waiting a year or more for HM Revenue and Customs to refund overpaid tax and national insurance contributions (NICs).
2 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
Great escape Plan now for a hassle-free holiday
How to book ahead and ensure your money is protected should something go wrong. Zoe Wood and Shane Hickey report
6 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
Mountain to climb Cautious joy greets rare twin gorillas
It was noon by the time Jacques Katutu first saw the newborn mountain gorillas.
2 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
The easiest way to get healthy? My day doing the bare minimum to live longer
A week into the first lockdown of the pandemic, I vowed I would never set foot in a gym again.
3 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
A Grande way to get kids into Sondheim - just don't mention the running time
The truest thing ever said about the Golden Globes was by Tina Fey when she hosted the awards in 2019 and described the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a group of junket hacks, as operating out of the \"back booth of a French McDonald's\".
4 mins
January 17, 2026
The Guardian
This time has 'tearful' Mandelson finally run out of spin?
The BBC's interview with Peter Mandelson offered ample evidence of the Labour peer's \"formidable political brain\", according to Louis Mosley, the UK head of the US data firm Palantir Technologies.
6 mins
January 17, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
