Batsmen Hate it When you do These Two Things | Cricket coaching, fitness and tips

Batsmen Hate it When you do These Two Things

Menno Gazendam is author of Spin Bowling Tips. Get your free 8 week spin bowling course here

There are two things that can make things really difficult for batsmen when they bat against spin.

When you do this you will make them feel like they are not in control. And they will start to lose their cool and make rash decisions.

And that means you get wickets.

1. Rush them

The advantage a spin bowler has over the quicks is he can get through overs so much quicker. And sometimes this can make a batsman feel he gets no break.

Mentally he has to be ready very quickly as you take no time between deliveries. He is still trying to figure out how to read you and then you are ready for the next delivery.

This exhausts batsmen.

They feel rushed and cannot plan their tactic against you. And before they know it the over is finished.

Be careful here though, you need to rush the batsman and not yourself. If you are not ready to bowl a ball then you don't bowl a ball.

You need to get back to your mark quickly. And have a plan on what you going to bowl before you start your over. Don't stand there and think on what to do. You must have a plan together for every situation before you start your over.

2. Dry up their singles

Nothing frustrates a batsman as much as the inability to keep the scoreboard ticking with singles. If a batsman takes 6 singles against you then he is in complete control.

He is reading you well and taking runs at ease. It also gives him momentum and confidence.

Make sure you dry up his singles. That way you show you are in control.

Forget about the boundaries.

They are a good sign that the batsman is losing control and trying a release shot.

I will take one release shot 6 against me any day, before I take 6 singles.

The added advantage when you dry up singles is that the batsmen do not rotate and you can get the over through quicker, and so rush the batsmen again.

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Comments

[10:21:30 AM] adamkhan: 509… Leggooly has been added in leg break armory quite some time ago by an unknown cricketer, but unfortunately very few people have know about this new invention in the game of cricket. Usually in leg break bowling, bowler has depends on googly, top spin and flipper. How do these varieties function? What is googly? While a normal leg break spins from the leg to the off side, away from a right-handed batsman, a googly spins the other way, from off to leg, into a right-handed batsman (and is distinct from an off break delivery). The bowler achieves this change of spin by bending the wrist sharply from the normal leg break delivery position. What is top spin? A topspinner is released over the top of the fingers in such a way that it spins forward in the air towards the batsman in flight. What is flipper? Squeezed out of the front of the hand with the thumb and first and second fingers, it keeps deceptively low after pitching and can accordingly be very difficult to play. How does this new addition in leg break armory works? I already have described about other varieties of in leg break bowling. What is LEGGOOLY? Bowler shows purposely his bend wrist to the batsman, that he is going to bowl googly, but at the last moment bowler has quickly guide finger to change it course and bowl turns away like leg break. You need extraordinary command to bowl this unique and very effective delivery. LEGOOLY would be more effective, if you should have achieved command to bowl leg break bowling with your middle and ring finger.