Jasprit Bumrah, widely regarded as the world’s finest fast bowler, is enduring one of the most puzzling stretches of his career. The Mumbai Indians pacer has gone five straight IPL 2026 matches without a wicket, bowling 19 overs and seriously hampering MI’s chances.
In that span, he has conceded 164 runs at an economy of 8.63, alarming figures by his lofty standards. It is also the longest he has gone without a wicket in his entire T20 career, 122 consecutive balls.

Former India all-rounder Irfan Pathan has identified the core problem. He flagged a drop in Bumrah’s average pace to around 130 kmph and an over-reliance on slower deliveries, used nearly 44 percent of the time. Pathan suggested trimming that to 30–35 percent and mixing in more pace and seam movement to make the change-ups effective again.
Opposition batters have also adapted. Rather than attacking Bumrah, they are now content to see him off and target the lesser bowlers, leaving him without wicket-taking opportunities despite maintaining pressure.
MI, once considered title contenders, now sit near the bottom of the table with just one win from five games. A Bumrah resurgence may well be the only thing that can turn their campaign around.
