🎥 The very best viral moments from the 2024/25 Premier League season 😂
🎥 The very best viral moments from the 2024/25 Premier League season 😂
It might not have been the most exciting of Premier League seasons, with no title race or relegation battle, but there was still plenty of memorable moments along the way.
From iconic celebrations and genuine head losses to funny fans and referees' getting more than they bargained for, the 2024/25 campaign had it all in a lot of ways.
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Of course, Jamie Vardy features more than once.
What was your favourite of these moments? Let us know in the comments!
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The leader of the Indian attack had Ben Duckett dropped during that explosive opening spell on the second day of this Test before returning to take the other England opener's wicket, bowled with the help of an inside edge onto the stumps. Then, most crucially, the best bowler in the world dismissed the No 1 ranked batter just before the close when Joe Root was lured by the uncertainty of where the ball was moving into pushing at Bumrah outside off-stump and edging to slip. He would have got Harry Brook, too, had Bumrah not inexplicably overstepped for the third time in the last over of the day, a no-ball ruling out the subsequent catch. But the game is fascinatingly poised with England at 209-3, 262 behind India, and Ollie Pope unbeaten on 100 after also being dropped, in his case on 60, off Mohammed Siraj. But it is Bumrah who will carry India's hopes into the third day on Sunday and throughout the rest of what is already developing into an absorbing series. So, what is it like to face this unorthodox genius? 'What makes him so hard is he's much quicker than people think,' former England all-rounder Moeen Ali tells The Athletic. 'Because of the slowness of his run up and stutter, people don't think it's going to be too quick, but he's elastic in his action, particularly in the way he releases the ball. 'It makes him so different. Other bowlers could probably do what he does, but it's the control he has over his wrist to get the ball going in and away, especially in England with the red ball. When he releases the ball, it's at a completely different angle to where it finishes. Advertisement 'I remember AB de Villiers (former South Africa batter) telling me Bumrah was the one bowler he's faced where he didn't know where the ball was going. AB was always ahead of all bowlers, but Bumrah was the one guy that he didn't know what was coming. He could bowl anything.' Keaton Jennings was one of Bumrah's first high-profile Test victims during that 2018 summer, being bamboozled by a delivery in Southampton that looked like it would swing away from the left-hander before clattering into his stumps. It was an early sign of things to come. 'He had emerged by then, but he didn't quite have the reputation he has today,' former Lancashire captain Jennings tells The Athletic. 'That ball at Southampton was the first, I think, he'd bowled in Test cricket with more than 1.2 degrees of swing. 'The thing that made it outstanding was that everything in his setup told me the ball would leave me as a left-hander. The three balls previously had gone away quite rapidly, and then there was no visual change to that ball. It just hooped back into me. 'I think it's late wrist movement that does it, but visually everything tells the batter it is going to leave you and then it doesn't. I was going to cut it and then the next thing I knew it had hit me on the inside of my knee.' Jennings' fellow left-hander Ali was playing in that Test and made a quick decision as to what to do next. 'Keaton didn't see the ball that got him, so as I was walking in, I decided I was going to play every ball as an inswinger and then if it went away, I would just try and deal with it,' said Ali. 'You may nick it, but at least that way I knew I wasn't going to be bowled or lbw! With certain bowlers, you can't cover all options, so you accept all you can do is narrow it down to one mode of dismissal. If you nick one, you nick one. That helped me more than if I'd tried to pick every ball because it's so difficult to see. Advertisement 'I didn't score many against Bumrah, but he didn't get me out in red-ball cricket. There was one game (the fourth Test of 2021) when he hit me on the foot and I was plumb, but the umpire gave me not out. For whatever reason, they didn't review it. 'In white ball cricket, you can't see his slower ball, and in red ball, it's the swing. He's got a very quick bouncer, too, and he's very good at yorkers. He's a modern great.' Former Australian all-rounder Moises Henriques believes that 'elastic' arm holds the key to Bumrah's success. 'I think what makes him so good is how far in front of his landing foot his arm gets,' Henriques tells The Athletic. 'That basically shortens the wicket for him. It obviously reduces the time the batter can react, even though it might not increase speed. 'And he has such a big separation of limbs. Both his arms are abnormally straight, he gets them up in the air, and they look like they're going all over the place. I guess you'd see that if you ever observe javelin throwers or baseball pitchers. 'He gets that maximum separation, which allows like a big sort of catapult reaction, and he's able to generate ridiculous speed from such a short run up. 'While he may have been blessed with some genetics, his greatest skill is his accuracy and consistency, not just the fa he's a bit left-field. There are a lot of strange actions out there, but they're not necessarily effective.' There was plenty to enjoy in Leeds on Saturday, with the equally unorthodox and equally dynamic India batter Rishabh Pant becoming the third century-maker of the visitors' innings and celebrating with a somersault. Then there was Pope repelling Bumrah and company at a time when his position at No 3 in the England order is under threat like never before from the emerging Jacob Bethell. But most of all, there was Bumrah, who finished the day with a snorter of a bouncer to the reprieved Brook. There will be plenty more to come from the modern great. Additional reporting by Nick Miller