Jasprit Bumrah has donated the shoes he wore during his five-wicket haul at Lord’s to the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) Museum. The contribution follows his clinical 5/74 in England’s first innings of the third Test, a performance that earned him a place on the iconic Lord’s Honours Board. The donation was confirmed by a PTI report, noting that while Bumrah retained the match ball, his spikes now rest on display at one of cricket’s most prestigious venues. The Indian pacer’s spell spanned across both days of England’s innings. He dismissed Harry Brook late on Day 1 and came back on the second morning to break the middle-order resistance, removing Joe Root, Ben Stokes, and Chris Woakes in a burst with the second new ball. The spell marked his second five-wicket haul of the ongoing series and took him past Kapil Dev for the most five-fors by an Indian fast bowler outside Asia. Notably, on Day 3, he got to bowl just 1 over only, where Zak Crawley got two runs only. Read also: Bumrah Reveals Jofra Archer’s Support During Injury Phase Honours Board etched, memories preserved Bumrah spoke with honesty and restraint at the post-match press conference. He shared, “Reality is, I was tired. I can’t jump around like a 21-year-old. I was happy that I contributed. The name on the Honours board feels good. It is something I can tell my son about when he is grown up." Notably, India added 242 runs to reach 387 all out in 119.2 overs. KL Rahul led with 100 from 177 balls, followed by Rishabh Pant’s 74 and Jadeja’s 72. Nitish Kumar Reddy (30) and Washington Sundar (23) chipped in with useful lower‑order runs. Akash Deep smashed a six in his quick 7 before falling cheaply, while Bumrah failed for eight. England’s bowlers shared the wickets: Chris Woakes picked up 3 for 84, Archer grabbed 2 for 52, Stokes bagged 2 for 63, Carse took one, and Bashir dismissed Rahul with one scalp. England began their second innings at 2/0.