How to exploit batting weaknesses: Choking grip
This is part of a series on How to exploit batsman's weaknesses. To see the other weaknesses click here.
If you are looking for batting weaknesses, it's best not to highlight a technique used by Don Bradman. So just to be awkward, that's exactly what I'm about to do.
The 'choked' or 'O' grip is a common variation of the more orthodox bottom hand grip and, despite the example of the Don, causes problems for batsman at club and school level.
How to exploit batting weaknesses: Open stance
This is part of a series on How to exploit batsman's weaknesses. To see the other weaknesses click here.
On the surface, an open stance is an excellent way to play. It gives the batsman a balanced position from which he or she has a wide range of scoring options.
But it can also lead to their downfall, if you know how to read it properly.
How to exploit batting weaknesses: Closed off stance
This is part of a series on How to exploit batsman's weaknesses. To see the other weaknesses click here.
A "closed off" stance is one of the easiest weaknesses to spot and exploit because the batsman reveals his hand before he has even faced a ball.
It's also very common in club cricket. At the level I play I see it every weekend at least once, especially with lower order and tail-end batsmen.
How to exploit batting weaknesses: Introduction
In cricket, all batsmen have technical weaknesses. Really good bowlers and captains are able to use them to get the player out.
In this new series we will examine the more common technical faults, show you how to spot them and give you the bowling and field setting tactics you need to exploit them.
So if you are a bowler or a captain and you find yourself scratching your head for ideas on how to get a player out, this is the guide for you.
Here's an easy way to stay focused during your bowling spell
Bowling is hard. At least when you bat and you are out you can hide in the pavilion, but when you bowl and are clattered for 3 boundaries in a row there is nowhere to hide. You have to finish the over.
No wonder the mind becomes cluttered with thoughts and plans when you stand at the top of the mark.
But an unfocused mind makes it difficult to bowl. How many times have you bowled wide outside the off stump, tried to compensate and end up throwing it down he leg side instead?
Cricket Show 65: Coaching young players and spin tips
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miCricketCoach - PitchVision miCricketCoach Show 065.mp3 | 23.51 MB |
David and Kevin are joined by Gary Palmer in a preview of the Countdown to Summer podcast for those in preseason. In the rest of the show, Kevin tells us about his team's batting collapse.
The spirit of giving: Free cricket coaching from PitchVision Academy
As you know, PitchVision Academy coaching courses are the most comprehensive guides to improving your game featuring some of the best experts in their fields.
For a while now we have been giving away some free samples of what you can get when you invest in an online coaching course, so I thought it was time to collect all these free samples in one place for you to enjoy without having to search through the archives.
How to bowl a slider
This article is an extract from Spin Bowling Tips. Master the art of spin bowling with the most comprehensive eBook on spin bowling ever produced, available now at PitchVision Academy.
The slider or back spinner is the reverse of the top-spinner. Instead of bouncing and kicking as the top-spinner does, the back spinner delivery will skid onto the batsman. This delivery is great for trying to trap the batsman LBW.
How to bowl a doosra
This article is an extract from Spin Bowling Tips. Master the art of spin bowling with the most comprehensive eBook on spin bowling ever produced, available now at PitchVision Academy.
The doosra is bowled by an off-spinner. Unlike the traditional off-break that spins into the batsman from the off, this ball behaves more like a leg-spin delivery and spins from leg to off. Therefore, this ball is a surprise variation for an off-spin bowler.
Why the first ball of the over is more important than the rest
Teams that score the most runs from the first ball of the over are more successful than teams that don't.
That's a statistic that English, Indian and South African fans may have missed, but not by the international coaches in the new world of every statistical nuance being uncovered by laptop analysts.