Prasidh fell short by going short but is eager to make amends
The India fast bowler, who has the raw materials to succeed in Test cricket, is working on his control
Sidharth Monga
28-Jun-2025 • 10 hrs ago
At Headingley, Prasidh Krishna became the first bowler in Test cricket to go at more than a run a ball in both the innings (minimum 15 overs bowled in each innings). He also registered the highest match economy for an India Test bowler. It in part contributed to India becoming the first team in first-class cricket to lose after scoring five hundreds in the match.
It is not difficult to see why Prasidh didn't get the desired results in Leeds. In the first innings, he bowled just 24 balls in the 6-8m good length band, one in five balls. Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj bowled half their deliveries on a good length. His economy when he pitched there was 3.75.
Instead he kept veering into short of a good length: 51 balls in 8-10m band for 53 runs and a wicket and 17 balls in 10-12m zone for 34 runs and no wicket. The first of these is just the limited-overs hard length, which is used as a defensive ploy with defensive fields. At Headingley, it just got hammered. The latter is a short ball, but not like you mean it. It didn't quite rise to the shoulder. When he went to the proper bouncer, in the 12-14m zone, Prasidh drew the results: two wickets of set batters in 11 balls.
It made for frustrating viewing because you know Prasidh has the ingredients to be a Test bowler. He has the highest release among the India bowlers, giving him the best chance to draw seam movement and disconcerting bounce. He is not express, but an average pace of 136.54 kph can be harnessed through accuracy. He did crank it up to 147.46 kph at one point.
Prasidh made improvements in the second innings, bowling half his deliveries in the 6-8m band for one wicket and an economy of 4.93. He looked more threatening than in the first innings, but by now the pitch had lost its juice and it wasn't deteriorating either. Still Prasidh has to find a way to not concede so many runs: be it get better on the line or work with his fields or come up with better plans for specific batters.
Prasidh Krishna is still very new to Test cricket and has the attributes to find success•Getty Images
It is easy to forget this was just his fourth Test but Prasidh is not hiding behind any excuses. "If I look at the first innings, I was a little too short than where I wanted to be," he said. "Definitely 6-8[m] is ideal. That's what I would say. I think second innings it got slightly better, but because again the wicket was slightly slower, I had to pitch a few slightly behind it and then go slightly fuller when I'm trying to get a wicket. So, yeah, I definitely did not bowl the lengths that I wanted to."
There were other factors at play. "Not wanting to float it up there is definitely one of the reasons," Prasidh said. "And also, it honestly took me some time to get used to the slope that side. But I should be able to do it as a professional. I take complete responsibility about it, and then maybe I do it better next time."
It could be noticed in the nets that bowling coach Morne Morkel and Prasidh are working at getting the default length slightly fuller without actually floating the ball up. Ishant Sharma, another tall fast bowler, had similar issues until he worked with Jason Gillespie at Sussex. Gillespie made him move away the traditional practice of hitting the cones on the pitch. He asked Ishant to forget the pitch but try to hit the knee roll on the batters' pads as hard as he could. That is something Prasidh could perhaps look at doing.
The processes can go on, but the economy can't be this high. Prasidh needs to be able to exert better control on the flow of runs. "I had a few conversations with a few of them about this particular match," he said. "I definitely would want to bring that down to whatever best I can do. I think I'm learning as well. It's up to me. It's my responsibility to get better, and that's what I'm trying. That's what I'm working on, and I just want to make sure I put in the right kind of work and come back here and put up better numbers."
Coach Gautam Gambhir supported Prasidh wholeheartedly minutes after the Headingley defeat. He pointed out to his lack of experience, but said he had all the ingredients to become a good Test bowler. The challenge won't get easier: Bazball pitches will remain flat, Bazballers will continue trying to dominate him, and he won't even have Jasprit Bumrah for two of the remaining Tests. It is up to Prasidh now to find a way to hit those good lengths without floating the ball. The rest can only flow from there.
Sidharth Monga is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo