Pitchvision Academy Forums |
Chat about coaching, fitness, drills, skills and mental training |
14 Feb 15 at 15:52 |
|
Help with bowling spin on matting pitches | |
Hey Guys! |
Pitchvision Academy Forums |
Chat about coaching, fitness, drills, skills and mental training |
14 Feb 15 at 15:52 |
|
Help with bowling spin on matting pitches | |
Hey Guys! |
Comments
Try to bowl slightly quicker through the air. You really need to rip the ball and provide extra revolutions on the ball to get side spin on a matting wicket. It requires lot of practice. Every time you go out to play, try and bowl at least 25-30 balls on the matting wicket prior to the match. The key for the spinner on a matting wicket is to get the Length right; drop it short and you get smacked over mid-wicket; overpitch it and you see the ball sailing over your head into the stands. As i said before you have to practice hard. As far as fighting the ball is concerned you read the batsman before you actually toss it up to him. One thing which really worked for me was to take my own time in between deliveries. Often we are in too much hurry and end up changing grip while delivering the ball; the result is a full toss.
Once you get control over you length you can compensate for lack of side spin by using the crease and varying the trajectory on the delivery.
All the best
Hey Kavindra, I know exactly what you're talking about. I faced the same problem myself. What I did was make 2 adjustments. First, practice a really quick arm ball. Use just the index finger and really fire it into middle and off. That'll keep the batsman guessing as to what to expect from you. And since you say that they dont use their feet much it makes this an ideal ball to get them LBW.
Next, practice imparting maximum revolutions on the ball. Your stock ball should leave your hand spinning like a top. You can do that by cocking your wrist and using the momentum in your action at the last second to uncock the wrist. Don't forget to have a nice, wide fingered and tight grip.
Hope this helps. All the very best.