With rising brand equity and a social media following that is the highest among all bowlers in the world, Bumrah is an outlier in a country where batters typically command high value
Three hundred and twenty seven days after Jasprit Bumrah went into an injury-induced layoff from international cricket, the speedster returned to the field in the three-match T20 series against Ireland, skippered the side, got a wicket with his second ball, and ended up as the Player of the Series. In the eight overs that he bowled in a rain-curtailed tournament, Bumrah bagged four wickets, notched up the lowest economy rate in the second match, and bowled a wicket-maiden as well.
While the cricket nerds can parse his action, speed and what have you, for the average Indian fan, the return of the vintage Bumrah would bring much cheer ahead of the Asia Cup and the ICC Men’s ODI World Cup to be played at home. If there’s one question that has bugged them more than who deserves to play at No. 4, it is when will the bowler return.
What Bumrah means to cricket fans and the eyeballs he garners with his on-field performance can be gauged by the loyalty of the brands he endorses, none of whom deserted him in the period–nearly a year–he was away from the game. Despite brand endorsements being linked to an athlete’s performance and visibility, Bumrah managed to not only retain all the 11 brands he previously had in his portfolio, say industry sources, he also added two during this period, with a third to be announced soon.
“In the next 12 months, we’re hoping to add another 50 percent and go up to 20,†says Nikhil Bardia, head of sponsorship sales & talent, Rise Worldwide, the agency that represents Bumrah. His endorsement fees have also jumped nearly 10x over his career, from around Rs20-30 lakh a day in 2016, to Rs1.5-2 crore per day currently.
On social media, the bowler has notched up approximately 100K followers in the three months since announcing his return–in end-May, with a photo of his bowling shoes captioned ‘Hello friend, we meet again’–with his total follower count touching about 25 million across platforms. His Instagram following has grown 7x since 2019, from 1.6 million in January 2019 to 10.4 million now. According to data by GroupM, the bowler who comes closest to his following is Yuzvendra Chahal with 8.8 million, but Chahal is far more prolific on the platform than Bumrah–with 1,626 posts to the latter’s 753. “He posts less frequently on social media than his counterparts in the team, but his posts receive much better engagement,†says Kunal Sawant, business head, INCA India, the influencer marketing arm of media investment company GroupM.