Jasprit Bumrah: The complete bowler, whatever the format

It is early days yet, but the Indian paceman’s numbers in all formats – especially Tests – are astounding

S Rajesh and Shiva Jayaraman06-Sep-2019Virat Kohli has called Jasprit Bumrah the most complete bowler in world cricket, and it’s difficult to argue with that, given the sort of numbers that Bumrah has racked up over the last three-and-a-half years.When he made his international debut at the beginning of 2016, Bumrah was seen largely as a limited-overs bowler. He had played 47 T20s and taken 52 wickets at an economy rate of 7.34 till that point, the highlight being a haul of 24 wickets in just 14 games in two – 2015 and 2016 – editions of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, at an average of 14.75 and an economy rate of 6.61. And in two seasons of the 50-over Vijay Hazare Trophy, he had 34 wickets in 14 games at an average of 15.20 and an economy rate of 3.82. Clearly, the call-up to the national limited-overs team was justified.ESPNcricinfo LtdBumrah did well in his first two years in international cricket, taking 56 wickets in 31 ODIs and 40 in 32 T20Is, and was rewarded with his Test debut in Cape Town in 2018, getting into the XI ahead of Ishant Sharma and Umesh Yadav. Eyebrows were raised at the time – Bumrah’s first-class record was decent but not extraordinary: 89 wickets in 26 matches – but the Indian think tank clearly saw something special in him. Less than two years down the line, the rest of the world is seeing it too.The numbers so far are staggering: in ODIs, he has picked up 103 wickets from 58 games at an average of 21.88 and an economy rate of 4.49; in T20Is, 42 games have fetched him 51 wickets at an economy rate of 6.71 (apart from 82 wickets in 77 IPL games). But it’s in Test matches that he has sparkled the brightest, taking 62 wickets from 12 matches at an average of 19.24.With a 20-wicket cut-off in each format, Bumrah is the only bowler to average less than 22 in Tests, ODIs and T20Is in the last ten years. He is also one of only three bowlers to take 50-plus wickets in his first 12 Tests, and 100-plus in his first 58 ODIs; Shane Bond and Brett Lee are the others.ESPNcricinfo LtdBefore going further, though, a caveat. These are still very early days in Bumrah’s international career. Great bowlers achieve their greatness by maintaining their standards over several years; Bumrah has been around less than two years as a Test-match bowler. However, in that period, he has played Tests in different conditions, with different balls, and has shown himself to be good enough to adapt and learn quickly, the last evident in his debut Test itself, when he followed a nervy and wayward first-innings show – 1 for 73 – with a much-improved second innings – 3 for 39. His outstanding skill set is complemented by a remarkably even and cool temperament. The superlatives have more than a little justification: in the last 60 years, only three other bowlers have taken 62 or more wickets in their first 12 Tests at a sub-20 average.