‘Ravindra Jadeja was hoping against hope, the real star was Jasprit Bumrah’: Ex-India cricketer’s massive statement after India’s Lord’s defeat | Cricket News

NEW DELHI: Former India batter Sanjay Manjrekar believes that KL Rahul’s form in the Test series against England stands out as the biggest positive for the visitors so far. Rahul has scored 375 runs in six innings during the series, including two centuries and a half-century, underlining his consistency at the top of the order.“The biggest satisfaction I’ve had – as an analyst and a former cricketer – has come from watching KL Rahul. He has always had the game. Yes, there were grey areas in his technique, but he worked on those and resolved them. What was missing was consistency. On one of our shows, we even jokingly gave him the title of ‘Mr. Consistent KL Rahul’ – but it’s taken him a long time to truly earn that tag.“He has now played over 50 Test matches for India, and what I’m seeing now is close to perfection – there are no visible weaknesses. For the first time in an overseas series, he has scored more than 200 runs. That, for me, is a massive takeaway for India,” Manjrekar said on JioHotstar.Reflecting on India’s narrow 22-run loss at Lord’s, Manjrekar also spoke about the crucial ninth-wicket partnership between Ravindra Jadeja and Jasprit Bumrah that gave India hope on the final day.
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“Ravindra Jadeja was batting well and defending resolutely, but it never looked like he was taking the kind of risks needed to help India win. He was playing a waiting game and hoping against hope. The real star in that partnership, though, was Jasprit Bumrah. He stayed out there for one hour and 40 minutes against high-quality fast bowling, facing bouncers, and it was remarkable to see how his net sessions with the bat finally paid off. The mental toughness we see in his bowling came through in his batting too, and that was truly special,” he said.
Manjrekar also praised Jadeja’s improved temperament and technique with the bat, pointing to his evolution as a dependable lower-order batter.“It’s heartening to see how much Jadeja trusts his defence these days. He plays long innings now, patient and with time on his side. The 70 runs he scored in the first innings were not a quick-fire 70 – he batted for four hours. And on this pitch, scoring 50 felt like batting for 50 hours. But if you look at that moment when Jadeja brought up his half-century, the visuals from the Lord’s balcony did not look too positive. The energy from the dressing room said it all, it felt like the team knew that winning would be very difficult. Jadeja was trying, no doubt, but given the pitch, the conditions, and India’s scoring rate, the chase looked beyond reach,” Manjrekar added on Jadeja’s gritty knock.
He also lauded Bumrah’s adaptability and game awareness across both innings, saying the fast bowler continues to add to his legacy in different ways.“In the first innings, Bumrah showed just how great a bowler he is. This was the kind of pitch where he could not really display his full range, so he bowled patiently and waited for opportunities. And when the moment came – in the latter half of the innings – he was ready. He picked up five wickets in the first innings on a surface that did not offer much assistance. Then, when Washington Sundar took four key wickets and India needed to wrap up England quickly, Bumrah stepped in again and delivered. That yorker to dismiss Brydon Carse is still fresh in the mind. Showing his greatness in different ways – that has become Bumrah’s legacy,” the former batter said.