Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘We need an alternativ­e to saliva’

STRAIGHT TALK Jasprit Bumrah feels that not being able to use saliva makes the game more batsman-friendly

- Press Trust of India sportm@hindustant­imes.com

Bumrah won’t miss the hugs and high-fives as part of a wicket celebratio­n but he will certainly miss applying saliva on the ball and feels an alternativ­e should be provided to maintain the red cherry.

The ICC Cricket Committee, led by former India captain Anil Kumble, recommende­d a ban on using saliva on the ball as an interim measure to deal with the Covid-19 pandemic. However, the Committee did not allow the use of artificial substances as a substitute move.

The new rule makes life tougher for the bowlers and Bumrah, like many former and current fast bowlers, feels there ought to be an alternativ­e.

“I was not much of a hugger anyway and not a high-five person as well, so that doesn’t trouble me a lot. The only thing that interests me is the saliva bit,” said Bumrah in a chat with Ian Bishop and Shaun Pollock on ICC’S video series Inside Out.

“I don’t know what guidelines we’ll have to follow when we come back, but I feel there should be an alternativ­e,” he added.

Bumrah said not being able to use saliva makes the game more batsman-friendly. “If the ball is not well maintained, it’s difficult for the bowlers. The grounds are getting shorter and shorter, the wickets are becoming flatter and flatter. So we need something, some alternativ­e for the bowlers to maintain the ball so that it can do something—maybe reverse in the end or convention­al swing.” When former West Indian pacer Bishop pointed out that the conditions have been favourable to the fast bowlers over the last couple of years, Bumrah nodded in agreement.

“In Tests, yes. That is why it’s my favourite format, because we have something over there. But in ODIS and T20…one-day cricket there are two new balls, so it hardly reverses at the end.

“We played in New Zealand, the ground (boundary) was 50 metres. So even if you are not looking to hit a six, it will go for six. In Test matches I have no problem, I’m very happy with the

way things are going.”

He finds it amusing that the batsmen keep complainin­g about the swinging ball. “Whenever you play, I’ve heard the batsmen—not in our team, everywhere—complainin­g the ball is swinging. But the ball is supposed to swing! The ball is supposed to do something! We are not here just to give throwdowns, isn’t it?

“This is what I tell batsmen all the time. In one-day cricket, when did the ball reverse last, I don’t know. Nowadays the new ball doesn’t swing a lot as well. So whenever I see batsmen say the ball is swinging or seaming and

that is why I got out—the ball is supposed to do that. Because it doesn’t happen so much in the other formats, it’s a new thing for the batsmen when the ball is swinging or seaming,” said the 26-year-old.

The Ahmedabad-born pacer finds himself in an unusual position as he has not bowled for over two months due to the lockdown imposed in the wake of the coronaviru­s outbreak. When India will play next is not clear yet and Bumrah said he is not sure about how his body will hold up when he returns to action.

“I really don’t know how your

body reacts when you don’t bowl for two months, three months. I’m trying to keep up with training so that as soon as the grounds open up, the body is in decent shape. I’ve been training almost six days a week but I’ve not bowled for a long period of time so I don’t know how the body will react when I bowl the first ball.

“I’m looking at it as a way to renew your own body. We’ll never get such a break again, so even if you have a small niggle here and there, you can be a refreshed person when you come back. You can prolong your career,” he said.

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