Kumble Praises India's Bowling Depth, Du Plessis Spots Tactical Weakness

Anil Kumble believes India's deliberate strategy to develop part-time bowling options over the past 18 months has created valuable depth and flexibility for the T20 World Cup. However, he acknowledges that on flat pitches, these part-time options, like Shivam Dube who has a high economy rate, could face significant challenges. Former South Africa captain Faf du Plessis adds a tactical perspective, suggesting opponents will look to attack bowlers other than Jasprit Bumrah to force India into using their sixth option. India, after a strong win against Zimbabwe, now prepares for a decisive match against the West Indies for a spot in the tournament knockouts.

Key Points: Kumble on India's T20 Bowling Depth, Du Plessis Analysis

  • Kumble praises India's 18-month bowling experiment
  • Part-timers like Dube provide flexibility but high economy
  • Du Plessis says opponents will target non-Bumrah bowlers
  • India faces West Indies in crucial knockout decider
2 min read

"They did the right things to get the batters to bowl": Anil Kumble on India's bowling depth

Anil Kumble lauds India's part-time bowler strategy, while Faf du Plessis highlights how opponents could target them on flat pitches in the T20 World Cup.

"They did the right things to get the batters to bowl": Anil Kumble on India's bowling depth
"They certainly did all the right things to get the batters to bowl a bit - Anil Kumble"

New Delhi, February 27

Former India Captain Anil Kumble believes India's experimentation over the past 18 months has strengthened their T20 depth, while former South Africa skipper Faf du Plessis highlighted potential tactical vulnerabilities on flat pitches.

Kumble pointed out that India's strategy of using part-time bowling options has provided balance and flexibility.

After India's five frontline bowlers - Arshdeep Singh, Jasprit Bumrah, Varun Chakravarthy, Hardik Pandya and Axar Patel, Shivam Dube has operated as the sixth option, while Abhishek Sharma and Tilak Varma are also potential to bowl an over or so.

However, Dube's bowling figures in the ongoing T20 World Cup are far from flattering: in 9.2 overs, he has conceded 124 runs at an economy rate of 13.28, even though he has picked up five wickets.

"They certainly did all the right things to get the batters to bowl a bit through the previous World Cup to now. If you look at the last 18 months, where India played T20 cricket, where they've won every single game, Tilak Varma got to bowl, Abhishek Sharma got to bowl, and Dube got to bowl. Then even Rinku Singh bowled, even Suryakumar Yadav bowled," Kumble said as per ESPNcricinfo.

Kumble suggested that giving multiple batting options overs during bilateral series before the T20 WC has created additional bowling cover heading into high stakes tournament. He also indicated that multiple part-time options provide help in high-pressure tournaments.

"So in that sense, you have options, and that's great. But on a flat pitch, there will be challenges. India would ideally want the comfort of playing eight batters, rather than going in with seven batters and five specialist bowlers." Kumble added

Du Plessis, meanwhile, focused on how opponents might approach India's attack.

"100%. You look at it and ask: who are the danger bowlers? Most of the time, it's Bumrah. On the day, you make that call - if you can get on top of someone else early, then the sixth bowling option is going to have to come in."

Referring to part-time options potentially being targeted, he added, "If that happens, and he [Dube] is bowling wide yorkers or defensive lines, you can line him up."

India came through in their must-win match against Zimbabwe comfortably, by 72 runs on Thursday. The Men in Blue will face the West Indies in a decider match for the remaining spot in the knockouts, along with South Africa.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Faf's point is very tactical and correct. Teams will definitely target the weak link. Dube's economy of 13+ is a major concern, no matter how many wickets he takes. In a knockout game, that one over could cost us the match. We need a proper 6th bowler, not just a part-timer.
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Priya S
I agree with the strategy but the execution worries me. What's the use of having Shivam Dube bowl if he's just going to leak runs? Maybe we should back a proper bowler like Chahal instead of relying on batters to chip in. Balance is good, but quality is more important yaar.
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Vikram M
Flexibility is the key in modern T20 cricket. Look at teams like England. Everyone chips in. The idea is brilliant, and we have the talent. Dube had a bad day, but he can be a match-winner with both bat and ball on his day. We must back our players! #TeamIndia
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Rohit P
Honestly, we are overthinking this. We have Bumrah, the best in the world. Arshdeep and Axar are in great form. Let the main bowlers do their job. In a big match, you don't want to be forced to give an over to a part-timer because your main bowler had an off day. Stick to strengths.
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Michael C
Interesting analysis from both legends. Kumble sees the strategic depth built over time, while du Plessis highlights the real-time tactical weakness. India's approach is proactive, but it does leave

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