“One of his qualities is that he trusts his skills. That is commendable. I have seen him for a long time. He has given his team [an important early] breakthrough – he is an expert in that. Spot on! I have never seen him give a lot of runs. I think it was a game-changing spell.”
It might have been that. Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) had put up 209 for 3 in a 19-overs-a-side game, and the target was big, but not massive. Kohli would have been expected to helm it. Bat through while the others did the bashing around him. But those two balls were all he lasted. And RCB, though they got close, fell short by nine runs.
Prince, who finished with three wickets – for just 33 runs – played it down when he spoke at the press conference: “I felt good after the [Kohli] wicket. But I am most happy that we won the match. If I had taken the wicket and we had lost, it wouldn’t have been so [good].”
“I think he’ll be a treat to stand [to] in the slips. Seriously, to watch this guy bowl – unbelievable. It’ll be a total pleasure to stand in first or second slip to him. He is a potential 50-over bowler as well. I think he’s an all-format bowler, the way he’s looking right now”
Ambati Rayudu
“I think he is going to make his [international] debut soon,” Rayudu said. “That guy is a special talent, Prince. The way he runs in – his run-up itself tells you that he is in there for a fight. He bowls a heavy ball and most of his deliveries are hitting the stumps. That’s his speciality.
“That ball [to get Kohli] was very, very special. The seam stayed up. This is a huge wicket. It’s Virat Kohli. Prince Yadav, who too comes from Delhi, plays for Delhi, gets his Delhi team-mate.”
Prince has been doing it all IPL. There have just been the two games where he hasn’t picked up a wicket. And he has an impressive economy rate of 8.08. Of bowlers to have sent down at least 30 overs this season, only three others – Sunil Narine (6.80), Bhuvneshwar Kumar (7.64) and Mohammed Siraj (8.00) – have better economies, and of them, only Bhuvneshwar has more wickets, 17, than Prince. And a lot of that quality is down to his fitness. Plus skills, honed initially in tennis-ball cricket. Twenty-four now, he has been a late-bloomer, but the strides he has made in just two-odd seasons of competitive cricket have been remarkable.
Martijn talked up Prince’s “arm speed through the crease and just the way that he’s able to get that energy and have such an incredible seam up position”, and Rayudu was left wishing he could stand in the slips to a Prince in full flow.
“I think he’ll be a treat to stand [to] in the slips. Seriously, to watch this guy bowl – unbelievable,” he said. “It’ll be a total pleasure to stand in first or second slip to him. He is a potential 50-over bowler as well. I think he’s an all-format bowler, the way he’s looking right now.
“Also, because he’s so fit, he’s so agile, and his action is so clean; he has that consistency which most of the bowlers don’t have. A lot of bowlers bowl one or two good balls in an over. This guy bowls about four to five. That’s his strength, I feel.”
Martin summed it up nicely when she said, “He’s got all the variations we saw in the backend – the slower deliveries as well. At length, he is able to go underneath the bat. I just love his alignment, so beautiful through the crease. We’re here sitting talking about a fast bowler. I think it’s probably Ian Bishop’s position: if you’re facing him, you feel like he was getting on a lot quicker [than expected] because he’s got that skiddiness. But he can swing the ball and seam the ball as well. You feel like [either] edge is a threat.”







