Streetwise Bowling: The Perfect Death Over | Cricket coaching, fitness and tips

Streetwise Bowling: The Perfect Death Over

This article is part of the "Streetwise Bowling" series from PitchVision Academy. To view the full list of tactics click here.

Pressure.

That's what makes death bowling so difficult. Any fool can fire a yorker down in a net. Very few can do it in a World Cup Final. And the punishments are severe.

Get it wrong even slightly and you watch the ball sail out of the park.

Get it right and you will be carried off the field on the shoulders of your grateful team mates. So if you are going to specialise and you want some glory then bowl at the death.

There are many theories, so to say there is one perfect way to bowl a death over is a bold claim. I reckon I have the answer though.

It's based on recent research published in International Journal of Performance Analysis in Sport about how winning teams use tactics. The researchers looked at everything from the amount of dot balls and wides, through how many spinners bowled to how many left handers bowled. Every factor was examined.

And they found out 2 things. Here is what they are:

  • Name: The Perfect Death
  • Bowling Type: Any pace that can bowl bouncers above chest high
  • Difficulty Level: 9/10

Ball 1

Nathan Bracken, master of death bowling, talks about "getting in and out of the over". This is a great bit of psychological shorthand. It means that the first ball over the over is focused on stopping runs.

This is because there is a correlation between the score from the first ball of an over and your chance of winning the match.

So bowl a yorker.

Yorkers cut the options for a batsman down dramatically and it makes it easy to defend with third man, fine leg, long on, long off, cover and midwicket. It might get you a wicket. It will almost certainly only go for a single.

You have the upper hand.

Ball 2-5

From here on in you have options: Either bowl another yorker or a bouncer.

That's it.

Certainly no length balls. They are tonked.

No slower balls, no slower ball bouncers, no double back flips with twists.

All these tricks have a place, but remember you are under severe pressure: the hopes of your team mates, the aggression of the batsman, the scoreboard. It's all on you. You need to keep it as simple as possible.

Going back to our research, we discover that sides who bowl the most bouncers and yorkers at the death also win the most games. Statistically at least, you are playing the percentages by sticking to very short or very full.

The exact make up is up to you.

Ball 6

However, the last ball is also simple: another yorker. This will get you out of the over without the risk of getting hooked for six.

Of course, the hard part is landing those balls with precision under pressure. If you want some advice on that, check out the videos and worksheets on Ian Pont's online coaching course Beating the Odds.

Good luck and enjoy it. You have your chance to be the hero!

Download and print a pdf version of this article to take to nets: click here.

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