“There’s pace, there’s bounce, yes there is,” Pietersen says. “Bang.”
“Just a warm-up” Doull says, almost doubting what he has just seen.
Malik’s first bouncer has taken this game to another level.
Compared to him, Malik is fairly one-dimensional, but that singular skill is about the sexiest thing in our sport: raw pace.
It means that every ball is an event. So after that opening bouncer, the next one is a length ball, outside off stump, too wide and not exciting, but that doesn’t douse down the excitement at all.
This is different. This is real pace. If Nabi was the dream, Malik is the reality.
His second over starts with Harsha Bhogle mentioning that the slip is standing right on the edge of the 30-yard circle. The second ball is a wicket, short and at the body. Shahbaz Ahmed is beaten for pace. By the time he catches up to it, he can only feather it down the legside for Pooran to complete a great diving catch.
The following ball Wanindu Hasaranga is beaten, a fast delivery angled in at him, but moving away. This isn’t an excellent T20 ball, it would be brilliant in any format. A few balls later he is playing across the ball trying to hit it to leg, and it ends up outside off.
His third over begins with a chyron on the screen that asks a simple question: “Is Umran Malik the fastest bowler India has ever produced?”
Sunil Gavaskar suggests you can only know that about the modern era. But Indian bowlers have not been fast historically, even if in recent times that has changed, Jasprit Bumrah, Varun Aaron, Ishant Sharma, Umesh Yadav have all been very fast. Or at least capable of rapid deliveries at times.
His speeds in this match come up on the screen. The slowest is 138.6kmph, which is still a quick delivery. But the average is 145kmph. To stay at 90 miles per hour he consistently is hard for even the fastest bowlers (although in this case, the average is helped by his lack of a slower ball).
More numbers of his speeds in his IPL career so far come up
- 120-129kmph 1.4%
- 130-139kmph 6.4%
- >140kmph 90.8%
In fact, he doesn’t bowl slower balls. Only 2.8% of his deliveries from him are under 130kmph. Because he is so quick, some of his slower ones of him are in the low 130s. But he only bowls 6.4% of his deliveries at 130 to 139. At the very most he bowls a slower ball every ten deliveries, and in truth, it’s probably far less than that. Those are not normal rates.
There is a DRS for caught behind that is overturned and Bhogle excitedly exclaims “Two slips in the 12th over, wow” as Malik finishes his third.
The fourth over has some pace in it. The first five balls are 151kmph, 148kmph, 151kmph, 141kmph and 147kmph. That is probably why 77% of the fan poll say Malik is India’s fastest bowler ever.
Jansen took out Faf Du Plessis, Virat Kohli and Anuj Rawat in one over. T Natarajan was pretty good too, knocking out Harshal Patel and Hasraranga’s stumps and taking Glenn Maxwell. Even J Sucith took two wickets. But the man with one wicket gets all the attention.
In the mid-match interview, Steyn is asked about Malik before Jansen. In the innings break, Pietersen is still talking about Malik unprompted, even as they show the other bowlers taking wickets. RCB are dismissed for 68, and the bowler with one victim is the story almost all the way through. You can put some of this down to the fact he is a young Indian quick. But a lot of it is just because he is young and that quick.
The real proof was in the way the commentators reacted to the two bouncers in that first over. The first one I described earlier. But the last one was just as important. It flashed by a missed hook shot, and it was his second delivery over the shoulder, meaning it was a no-ball, and RCB would get a free hit.
Usually, a mistake like that would get the commentators all upset with the bowler and the lack of discipline. Instead Hayden bellows: “Bring it on, bring it on,” while Pietersen is just laughing. Shabaz slaps the free hit over cover for a boundary, meaning the extra bouncer cost Sunrisers 7.3% of RCB’s total.
No one cares. Because Umran Malik is fast.
Jarrod Kimber is a writer for ESPNcricinfo. @ajarodkimber
www.espncricinfo.com