The second Test of the Border Gavaskar Trophy 2024-25 started at the Adelaide Oval on day two as as the visitors looked to bowl the hosts out in a bid to reduce the lead as minimally as possible. In their quest to do this, pacer Jasprit Bumrah was the harbinger, picking Nathan McSweeney and Steven Smith upfront. Just when India was looking to have gotten the lost rhythm, there was an injury scare concerning Bumrah. The star India pacer, towards the end of the second session's play, was bowling the 20th over of the match. After bowling the third delivery, he was walking back to his mark, and he showed discomfort with his adductor muscle. As soon as the sight of Bumrah in discomfort was evident, the physio of the team rushed towards him and provided the treatment. Also Read | Watch: Rishabh Pant Playing a Hook Shot Like a Right-Handed Batter Soon after the treatment, Jasprit Bumrah was bowling in his usual flair. Rishabh Pant had tried the technique of halting the game to break the momentum of the batters during the T20 World Cup 2024 final, applauded as it bore the result. But in Bumrah's case, the small discomfort could well be real, as he has previously been rested for the series against Bangladesh to provide him ample rest. Australian legend Glenn McGrath had a word for Bumrah, who is touted to be at his peak. He has been in marauding form, and McGrath noted that the 31-year-old has "retrained" himself to get to where he was now while also adding that the process was "not easy.". Here is what McGrath said as quoted by Hindustan Times “I saw Jasprit when he was younger, he had good pace, but his action was completely different. Short run-up, he came in, he was bowling quick but he had a massive jump-out. I sort of suggested it would be better if he went through the crease, but he couldn’t do it. He played like that but then I think he had a problem with his knee. When he came back, he had to train himself to go through the crease,” “Let me say, I’m not taking any credit whatsoever for that, but he had to re-train himself, which is tough, and now he goes straight through the crease, arm right behind the ball with that pace and skidding it into the stumps. He’s definitely a handful,” he added.