Cleanprophet
Active Member
Hard this leg spin lark, eh?
On top of getting your legspin up to scratch, you really, really need to be backed up in the field and by the captain. That happens rarely in club cricket apart from the very best club cricket. Most of your lower level club cricket and friendly cricket is not a great place for a spinner, especially a legspinner. You just have to constantly keep putting it into perspective. As you say, if the fielder takes the catch then that batter isn't on strike to hit a further 16 runs. An 18 run over could easily have been 1 for 8 or maybe even 2 for 8. It can change so easily. I've lost count of the number of drops I've seen off my bowling - most of them very easy. It can be disheartening. Even more so because I've never dropped a catch off any other bowler (dropped 2 and half off my own bowling - all smashed back at my ankles). It's all good for developing a good thick skin, that's for sure!
Googlies are going everywhere. Although I haven't mastered control the wrong wrong'un is definitely possible from 22 yards and is coming out for me with flipper qualities. The back-spinning flipper should be easier.
I can't thinking that you really should just focus on the legspinner. Target bowling is something I'm focusing on solely now. I'll just be putting down markers and looking to hit that marker every time. You can easily miss your length by a yard and go for runs. I was doing a fair bit of bowling last week against the best batter at the club. He's a very good batter. Very close to professional standard. Bowling the ball on a good length and on offstump was, as you might expect, the best place to bowl to him. If I gave him a sniff of a scoring opportunity, then he was all over it. He plays the slog sweep very impressively. He said to me that he can't do a great deal with the length ball on offstump besides block it. Towards the end he went into T20 mode and I had him stumped. I'll be doing some more bowling to him tomorrow evening. I can't recommend enough bowling to a quality batter (I've done a bit of bowling to our pro, who is a left-arm spinner and useful batter).
I can only bowl a variation to these batters if I know I can land it on that correct line and length. If I'm off that length, I'm going for runs. It is vital to get a good sequence of 6 balls together. It is something you see and hear in cricket all the time (quite often for legspinners). There's no point in bowling 3 or 4 good balls and then putting in a short/full ball. You have to build pressure on a batter. It is hard enough to have very good control of line and length of a legspinner without bringing in variations. Not to mention of course that the legspinner is the best ball you can bowl. Drift, dip, turn and bounce away from the bat. It's as good as it gets. Any decent batter will tell you that if you can land 6 out of 6 on a line and length then you will be a very good and dangerous bowler. That's where your focus should be. It's all been said before (SLA has said it many times I know). I've always put the priority on the legspinner, but I am now focusing completely on target bowling. I bowled a ball on Sunday to a 1st/2nd team batter (he could not play straight, only across the line and mostly legside). It landed perfectly, induced the play and miss. Beat the batter and beat the keeper too. It was just a nicely bowled and landed legspinner. That delivery is just too good for all but the very good batters. Simple as that. You don't need variations against the vast majority of club batters. Variation in pace, flight and line of attack, sure. But the legspinner alone is more than sufficient.
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