In the fast lane: A new generation of Indian fast bowlers, forged in the IPL, offers depth, variety and a long-awaited sense of security for the future
Indian cricket sees a surge in fast-bowling talent. The 2026 IPL edition highlights a deep pool of promising quicks. Players like Prince Yadav and Ashok Sharma exhibit raw pace and strong fundamentals. This development provides crucial depth for I...

It might sound odd to say this when batsmen are ruling the roost in the tournament, but the biggest relief for the team management and the BCCI’s Centre of Excellence, headed by VVS Laxman, is the emergence of a breed of fast bowlers.
There may not be one obvious candidate ready to displace the first-string of Indian cricket, but the raw materials are there to allow the system to create a pathway for a finished product to emerge.
Prince Yadav hits the deck in a reliably pleasing manner, flirts with the 145kmh mark, and can bowl his variation with minimal change in action. He has that X-factor that was once such gold dust in fast-bowling circles, and the one thing the MRF Pace Foundation scoured the country for. But in those times, the rare player who surfaced often lacked the foundation to kick on.
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Like Prince, Ashok Sharma has caught the eye. Here is real pace, and not generated by some happy accident of physicality or someone straining desperately. It comes from having strong, natural fast-bowling fundamentals. Here is someone a top-quality coach can work with and elevate to international standards. Mukesh Choudhary is another who is bound to excite. Strong left-arm pace, coupled with real aggression in both action and delivery, creates a confluence of threats seldom seen in Indian cricket. What he brings to the table is something every captain wants, because it converts a very good team into an exceptional one. Sakib Hussain, Praful Hinge, Gurjanpreet Singh ... these are just a few of the other names pointed out by the usually prescient Himanish Ganjoo, the analyst, recently on X. What the post did was shine a light on how the IPL is a fertile ground for improvement in different facets of cricket. This edition was earning a tag as a batting fest, where bowlers were reduced to bowling machines, with batting shoot outs threatening to become the norm. But, while that brought its monotony, it created an opportunity to look at the fast bowlers to see how they were adapting.
The critical thing that emerged is that a variety of bowlers, none of whom may have one very obvious strength, such as a booming inswinger, a Bumrah-like yorker, or a disguised change of pace ... all have a sharpened approach. They have the problem-solving mindset. Each has the thinking approach of how they may try and get the better of a batsman or make it difficult for him to score.
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There is a generation of uncapped bowlers who are thinking like fast bowlers. That many of them have the physical attributes, the hunger, and the coaching support they needed is a blessing. If India are to be strong across formats and have genuine depth through a packed calendar, their fast-bowling stocks have to be strong. When a player steps up, he has to have the confidence and the strut, along with the skills, to fit in very quickly. When workloads have to be managed, there will not always be the luxury of choosing a “weaker team” against whom to rest the big guns. Then the pressure of the World Test Championship becomes even more strangulating.
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