How to use fitness training to make better young cricketers
It’s a natural reaction to the unknown and a way of protecting yourself. But as a coach your job isn’t to live in fear of negative results, it’s to get best from your players.
And that means learning how to train your players in more than cricket, even if they are very young.
Fitness training for teenagers or younger though? Surely that doesn’t feel right?
Fielding drills: Non-stop stopping
Purpose: To practice stopping and throwing at a stump in a competitive situation
Description: Players are split into teams of roughly 3 a side. The first player throws the ball at the stump in the middle. He or she then moves to the back of the queue. The player on the opposite side fields the ball and also aims at the stump before moving to the back of the queue.
How to get your leg break back
You know all good leg spinners have a well disguised googly; the one that goes the other way.
So you practice hard in the nets, trying to get the perfect ball.
So hard in fact, that somehow you forget how to bowl a normal leg break. You are stuck in the hell of only bowling wrong ‘uns.
Are you destined to become a googly bowler for the rest of your life?
Free cricket test that makes nets more realistic
We all know how important fitness is to cricket, but nets don’t realistically recreate the fitness you need to get a big score.
That’s where BATEX© (BATing EXercise) comes in.
Normal netting rarely tests batsmen's endurance. It doesn't accurately reflect the effects of fatigue on the batsman's skill levels. But BATEX does exactly that.
How to use nets to become a better batsman
Everyone goes to nets in the hope of finding form and improving technique. But the way most people do it is totally ineffective.
But Gary Palmer takes things totally differently.
In this short video, Gary explains how he uses nets at his CCM Academy to make significant and noticeable differences to players technique, mental approach and run scoring ability.
Click here to watch the video and find out more.
Grab one of the last few places for PitchVision Academy Live!
With just over a week before PitchVision Academy Live! starts in Manchester, there are only a couple of places left .
Become your team's classy one day finisher in 3 easy steps
Think of the excellent one day ‘finisher’ batsmen like Michael Bevan, Eoin Morgan and MS Dhoni: The guys who can win a game by being there at the end of the innings.
They all have the ability to keep up with the run rate through innovative batting. It seems they can play the same ball into at least 2 different areas of the pitch.
Fielding Drills: Winner takes all
Purpose: To practice the one hand pickup and underarm throw under pressure in a competitive situation.
Description: Players stand in pairs opposite each other about 20m apart with one ball per pair. On cue, players roll the ball slowly towards their partner. As soon as the ball is released the partner runs in picks up the ball one handed and underarms it back.
Ask the readers: What are your indoor cricket tips?
Being an outdoor sport on a big field, cricket doesn’t lend itself well to being indoors. But there is a thriving indoor game, especially in the UK and Australia during the winter months.
It’s fast, furious and the ‘five-a-side football’ version of cricket.
I must admit I’ve never played a proper game, only ever netting indoors. The idea has never appealed much.
What Makes a Cricketer Built for Fast Bowling?
Andrew Flintoff, it was often said, was not built for fast bowling. The stresses of the action eventually forced him to retire through injury.
But anyone who can send a series of cricket balls crashing down at 90mph onto the same handkerchief sized bit of pitch must have some kind of build for it.
Flintoff was both blessed and cursed; built for fast bowling with a built in obsolescence.
So what are the traits a fast bowler really needs to be quick and injury free?

