News
Kyle Jamieson Ready With Dukes Ball Ahead Of The WTC Final
By CricShots - May 26, 2021 5:59 pm
Views 54

The New Zealand all-rounder, Kyle Jamieson, whose performances in his first six Test matches helped New Zealand to reach the World Test Championship (WTC) final against India, ensured during Indian Premier League (IPL) that his franchise skipper Virat Kohli didn’t get to face him with the Dukes ball he was carrying for practice. In his career so far, Jamieson has scalped 36 wickets at 13.27 and scored 226 runs at 56.5 as his team won all six Test matches he played in.

jamieson
Kyle Jamieson dismissed Virat Kohli

Australia all-rounder Dan Christian, who was at Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) with Kohli and Jamieson, revealed in ‘The Grade Cricketer’ podcast that Jamieson told Kohli he won’t bowl at him with Dukes ball since he was likely to bowl at him in WTC final between India and New Zealand that begins on June 18.

ALSO READ: Ryan Burl Will Be Punished For His Sponsorship Plea?

During the podcast, Dan Christian had recalled, “In the first week we were there, the three of us were sitting down at nets, and these two are talking about Test cricket. Virat says ‘Jamo, have you bowled much with the Dukes’ ball’ and they’re talking about that stuff, and Jamo is ‘I’ve got a couple here, I’ll have a bit of a bowl leading in before I go over there’.”

kyle jamieson
Kyle Jamieson can be a threat to the Indian team

He further added, “And Virat says: ‘if you want to bowl at me in the nets I’m more than happy to face you’. And Jamo is like: ‘no chance I’m going to bowl at you’. He (Kohli) would get a good look at his release point and everything he does with the Dukes ball.”

On Wednesday, Kyle Jamieson acknowledged that Dukes’ ball presents a different challenge from Kookaburra which the Kiwis are used to playing with.

WATCH – Smriti Mandhana Shares Her “Morning Rituals”

Elaborating the same, Kyle Jamieson said, “It’s a new challenge for me and not something I’ve encountered too many times but it’s what we’ve been dealt. It (the ball) is certainly a little bit different; darker and harder and the seam is a little narrower. Trying to get used to it in hand and our conversations have been around what the Dukes ball can do, being mindful of the fact you don’t want to go searching too much in terms of trying to move it.”