Coaching | Cricket coaching, fitness and tips

Can indoor nets hurt your early season form?

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When the weather is not so good the indoor net is a saviour to cricketers. The question is: do they do more harm than good?

I would be interested to see an experiment where 2 groups of players were split into those who netted in the winter and those who did not. I suspect at club level the difference in form might be less than we imagine.

'The Map' Part 6: How to learn new skills from every match you play

Cricket is a great game in that you can learn from every game you play. The trick is organizing so that lessons learned can be identified and stored for future use.

Evaluating your game should be an ongoing feature of your map. By regularly assessing how your game is developing, you give yourself a better chance of picking up small flaws in your game before they develop into major problems. When developing evaluation routines try these techniques:

Is a cricket ball less important than you think for improving bowling speed and accuracy?

This PitchVision Academy exclusive article is a great fast bowling primer for coaches and players alike. To put it fully into action we recommend you look at Ian's fast bowling course to learn his drills and techniques.

If it wasn't for cricket balls, there would be a lot more fast and accurate bowlers playing cricket.

Cricket Show 19: Technique builds confidence

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Kevin and David are back to discuss your cricket coaching questions in the new series of the miCricketCoach Show.

If you have a question or comment related to cricket technique, fitness, nutrition, tactics or psychology you can email the show here.

This week we talk about:

Case study update: Mental training

This article is part of the miCricketCoach 2009 Case Study. To stay up to date with their progress get the free newsletter.

This week, as the season approaches, we are moving our focus onto more mental aspects of preparation and playing.

Before we do that let's recap on Geraint and Naz so far.

The performance paradox: Why being a better cricketer is about more than cricket

More cricket and more training is not the fastest route to cricket success.

It's easy to think so at first glance. We already know that it takes around 10,000 hours to achieve mastery of any cricket skill. The simple maths is that the more hours you log the faster you improve. That logic is sound but it's far from the whole story.

Technique or mental strength: What's more important?

Modern cricket has almost torn up the coaching book.

How a professional batting coach works with players

This PitchVision Academy exclusive article by Gary Palmer is a great primer for coaches and their players alike. To put it fully into action we recommend you look at Gary's batting courses to learn his drills and techniques.

Ask the Readers: Can technology improve coaching?

You may have noticed we have had a big focus this week on technology in cricket coaching. Now I want to know your opinions:

Can technology help cricketers become better?

Leave a comment at the bottom of this article and let us know your thoughts on all things technology.

Case study update: Technical analysis

This article is part of the miCricketCoach 2009 Case Study. To stay up to date with their progress get the free newsletter.

This update will focus on a technical analysis of Naz batting in the nets. Naz has sent in a video of him batting at Lords' indoor school. Here is what I have discovered.