legspinking
New Member
batting tips
plz post your batting tips thanks heap mine are
watch the ball
know the off stump
atack the ball
plz post your batting tips thanks heap mine are
watch the ball
know the off stump
atack the ball
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maverick;399839 said:Have a set routine
Trust your routine and ability
JAmler;408909 said:Batting isn't as easy as many people make it. The basic principals are to look to hit in the "V" (between mid-on and mid-off) in your first 10-20 deliveries you face. Then you should look to rotate the strike until you find your confidence and start playing your shots. When batting in a limited overs match, you are slightly more aggressive in the manner of attacking the new ball or against the spinners and medium-pacers but the best batsmen always look to play straight or into the gaps without taking too much risk until they get confidence.
riversidestrangler;409009 said:No need to wait 10-20 deliveries to look for singles. You should be doing this right from your very first ball. Be positive. Drop in a gap, run, get up the other end.
Yes, obviously you attack in limited overs cricket but look at players like Jonathan Trott or Jacques Kallis, they hardly hit sixes but they have fantastic limited over records. As a club cricketer, I personally look to take singles off good bowlers and then when spinners or part-timers come on, I focus to attack.Boris;409048 said:Depends really. If it's an unlimited overs match, then I myself would play, and suggest to play, in the V and just look to keep the ball out. It would give me time to adjust and from their I would subjectively decide on how I feel when to start looking to actually play shots with the intent of scoring. I would also ask the guy at the other end to keep me off strike for a bit while I adjust to the light and conditions etc.
In a limited overs match then no way. Go for it, as you say, be positive and attack the fielders, drop it into the gaps.
Dave it isn't (or shouldn't be) the case that you get the MCC coaching manual and progressively work your way through learning specific shots imo. As you say, most start with playing in the V as that has a dual purpose being the basis of a sound defence and also then leads to the more attacking option of the drive down the ground.
Where to go next depends on a lot of factors, but you should consider 1) your strengths, 2) your weaknesses & 3) the cricket you play. Three should be pretty easy for you - lower order batter in club cricket where you are unlikely to face much quick, short pitched bowling, so you would probably be better looking to continue to play off the front foot and find options to rotate the strike rather than knock it out of the park. Part one and two is about where you have 'scoring options' and where you don't, the trick is then getting the right balance between cementing the strengths or developing solutions to known weaknesses (leg side in your case I guess). So, if I was you I would start by drawing a 'wagon wheel' of your existing 'shots' and try to work in additional options to balls you currently either struggle with or don't have a scoring option for, perhaps a leg glance might be a useful option?
Is there a recommended order in which you should learn to bat. I have the impression from all the training I've seen coaches doing that you should learn to play straight drives through the V as a starting point, but what next? What do you think is the next step? What are the easiest shots to learn? Or rather then most recommended after the straight drives?