Srinagar: Former South Africa pacer and Sunrisers Hyderabad coach Dale Steyn has reflected on his time with Umran Malik in IPL and how the pacer once proved him wrong by going full throttle while as Steyn wanted him to bowl a slower one.
Umran Malik is out injured and will miss the IPL 2025. Kolkata Knight Riders had picked him at the IPL mega auction for ₹75 lakh. He has been out if action for a long time and one was hoping for his return in IPL 2025. However, that hasn’t happened.
His coach at Sunrisers Hyderabad, Steyn has recalled how Umran once went completely against his orders to prove him wrong.
“This is quite a funny story because I went and I said that to him and he said, ‘Oh, that’s a great point. Thank you very much. If Bhuvi is doing it, I’ll try it.’ And we were sitting in a game in Mumbai and it was the perfect time for him [Umran] to bowl a slow ball. And he ran in, and I turned around and I said to Murali [Muthiah Muralidaran, Sunrisers Hyderabad assistant coach], ‘I think he’s going to bowl a slower ball.’ And he ran in and he bowled a yorker and he knocked the stumps out all over the place,” Steyn said on the ESPNCricinfo’s Cricket Monthly.
“The camera turned and it pointed towards me and Murali as if the coaches had come up with this amazing thing. And I was like, you know what, sometimes the master is the guy that’s actually on the field. I’m telling him to bowl a slower ball. And he ran and bowled a gas 155kph yorker and knocked the stumps out of the ground. Sometimes the stats don’t really matter. But there’s definitely a place for it in helping players know what other players are also doing that helps them get better. And in that case, it’s something that Umran Malik can certainly work on, but he proved me wrong that day. He just said, this is my skill. I’m going to do this.”
In IPL 2023, Umran had just five wickets to show for his effort, only to return wicketless last year. This sharp decline, reckons Steyn, has a lot to do with realising that the team’s needs come ahead of individuals.
“Sometimes you get thrown into the scene like the IPL. You come into the ground and there’s 60,000 people screaming and you feel like, oh, I have to run in and I have to bowl 160kph an hour, which is great, but if it goes against the game plan and it goes against the run of play, you are going to go for 60-70 [runs] and that’s not going to do your team any good. It’s not going to do you any good,” added Steyn.