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INDIA TOUR OF ENGLAND, 2025

Enter Akash Deep: Seam-tight, Shami-lite

Akash Deep picked up ten wickets in the Test.
Akash Deep picked up ten wickets in the Test. ©Getty

There's a famous image of Mohammed Shami beaming at the camera, holding up two broken pieces of a stump like trophies. It was taken after the final day of the Visakhapatnam Test in 2019, a game India won on the back of a classic Shami fourth-innings burst. At Edgbaston, nearly five years on and thousands of miles away, Akash Deep struck a strikingly similar pose: a ball in one hand, a stump in the other. Only, he wasn't quite sure how to be in the moment. He ran a hand through his hair, as if to style it for the photo, then pulled the India cap over it anyway. You could tell this was all new, the attention, the applause, the idea that the cameras were now trained on him.

It was Akash's first five-wicket haul in Test cricket. His first ten-for in a match. And the first time he was the centrepiece of a famous Indian victory. Like Shami in that Vizag game, Akash too knocked the stumps out four times in a stunning burst of seam bowling on the fourth and fifth days. But the parallels didn't stop there. Speaking to the BBC after the match, England captain Ben Stokes said the surface had a subcontinental feel to it, a passing remark that only added another layer to the deja vu.

Before Sunday, no Asian team had ever won a Test at Edgbaston, a stat that hints at a deeper mismatch in conditions. You could wager that the swing and seam and perhaps the bounce at this venue undid those other visiting teams. But in keeping with how Stokes likes his team to play, this was a flat deck. Flatter, perhaps, than even the home side anticipated. England's four-man pace attack toiled on it and managed only 9 for 593 across both innings. Akash Deep, on debut in England, took 10 for 187, and looked utterly at home.

After the third day, he spoke about what he'd always imagined Test cricket in England to be like and how the Bazball era had forced a rethink. The dream scenario for a fast bowler is perhaps obvious: a grassy deck, a stacked cordon, and a ball doing plenty. But for Akash, it is possible the choice may not be that straightforward. He's just as at ease - perhaps even more effective - on a dry wicket like this, with two slips, a gully, and a pair of midwickets in play. A set-up that encourages him to attack the stumps, not just the outside edge. It's what he's known and done through much of his first-class career in India. It's what he did in Birmingham, relentlessly attacking the stumps and outbowling every other seamer on display.

The catching midwickets are useful even if they are not always in play. They allowed Akash to pitch the ball a few inches outside off stump and seam it back in to the right-hander, with the insurance of leg-side fielders in case of an error. And if the ball happened to kiss a fifth-day crack along the way - jagging low or spiking off the pitch - all the better.

Like Shami, Akash gets a remarkable number of batters bowled in India. Seven of his ten Test wickets at home have crashed into the stumps. Before the start of the season in September, his domestic numbers told the story: 42 of his first 118 first-class wickets were bowled, a staggering 35%. Among Indian bowlers, only Shami comes close with 38% of bowled dismissals in home Tests. It's a rate bettered globally since 2000 only by Shoaib Akhtar and Shannon Gabriel.

Akash struck a similar pose nearly five years after Shami did.
Akash struck a similar pose nearly five years after Shami did. ©Getty

But while with Akhtar, the imagery is of fast, full, reverse-swinging thunderbolts, Akash offers a very different kind of subcontinental threat. He hits the stumps from awkward lengths. Take his dismissal of Harry Brook early on the final morning, a vicious nip-backer off a crack that deviated over two degrees and projected to hit the stumps.

But here's the twist: that ball pitched 7.4 metres from the stumps, or on the shorter side of the good length band. And in both innings, you saw the same reaction from Brook, caught on the crease, neither fully forward nor fully back. For a batter shaped by English conditions and muscle memory, there's no instinct to lunge forward to defend that length. Which is why he reviewed so instantly even after he was comprehensively beaten, hoping, expecting even, that it would miss the stumps from there. It didn't, and that's what makes Akash so deceptive. His natural skid allows him to hit the stumps from that zone, without always needing to go full as he did for the Joe Root dismissal.

And also, seam is harder to counter than swing, because it arrives later. Throw in a fifth-day crack into the mix, and surprise becomes shock. Which is exactly what happened to the world's No.2 batter - twice.

This was the ultimate difference between the two sides. Akash, and Mohammed Siraj, bowled a higher percentage of balls that hit the stumps from a wider set of lengths and angles. And once Akash had figured out that his modus operandi was not going to be too different to what he's known, he simply slipped into "the zone", that little-understood, often-invoked phenomena in sport.

It's not always visible, but in Birmingham you could sense it. Like when time bends around one individual's rhythm, where the body obeys instinct, and the mind is so tuned into its task that it becomes unaware of everything else. Twice during his opening burst, he began the long walk back from fine-leg to his bowling mark, only to realise his partner, Prasidh Krishna, still had a delivery left in the over. He sheepishly turned around both times, but those absent-minded moments were not lapses. They were signs of absorption.

At Edgbaston, a ground where India have seen heartbreak before, Akash Deep appeared to vanish into that state. Bowling when he wasn't bowling. Bowling where he has always bowled. And gave India a new memory stitched into the story of their fast-bowling evolution. A Shami-lite for the next phase.

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