Ten years since the end of Saeed Ajmal and the doosra: where's offspin at?

The skill thrives thanks to R Ashwin and Nathan Lyon, but the magic that the wrong’un wielded is all but gone

Osman Samiuddin28-Sep-2024Ten years ago this month, Saeed Ajmal was banned from bowling after the ICC found his action to be illegal. Concern initially had centred around his doosra, though in the Galle Test in which Ajmal was first reported, umpires thought both his offbreak and doosra were suspect. In all they reported approximately 30 deliveries. Testing at an ICC lab two weeks later confirmed their suspicions: every single one of the 37 deliveries Ajmal bowled was delivered with an elbow extension that far exceeded the 15-degree limit.At the time Ajmal was not alone to be called, but he was the most high-profile. The ICC had tightened testing protocols, as well as its resolve. It had empowered umpires to report actions they thought were suspect, with the new process-driven approach taking the stigma and heat – for both umpire and bowler – out of the equation. These weren’t ch***kers endangering the moral fabric of the game anymore. They were athletes with faulty actions that could be rehabilitated. Between June and December that year, umpires reported eight bowlers, six of whom were banned from bowling. Ajmal returned the following year but was not remotely the same. Three ineffective ODIs with a new roundarm action later and he was done.Related

  • When Murali bared his soul

  • The doosra

  • Let's talk about flex

  • Saqlain Mushtaq: 'One has to listen to that inner voice'

  • The 15-degree rule

With him, so too was the doosra. In their 2021 book , Nathan Leamon and Ben Jones found that post-2015 the percentage of balls turning away bowled by an offspinner had all but halved (those that did move away, they concluded, were mostly carrom balls). And the doosra being so critical to the offspinner by then, it was natural to conclude the entire breed’s time was also done. Batting was taking an expansive leap forward, the mind had been freed and the body shaped for power-hitting. More than ever, bowlers needed multiple weapons at their disposal. This was completely the wrong time to have one taken away.