Stop Insane Mistakes With Sane Post-Game Reviews
They say that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
Yet how many times after a game have we "reviewed" performance with a bunch of fleeting clichés about bowling better, taking our catches and taking responsibility as a batting unit?
How many times do we actually do something about this complaint other than hope things will change next time?
What Makes 11 Individuals into a Great Team?
Cricket doesn’t need perfect teamwork to win games, but it certainly helps and is certainly a goal worth striving for. Here are some tips.
Teamwork is a tricky thing. It’s not easy to measure or analyse. There is no direct relationship between a bonded team and success. Different approaches work for different groups. It’s messy.
There is no simple template for a great team.
Coach of the Month: Jamie Watkins

Jamie Watkins is Coach of the Month.
Jamie has been coaching at Taranaki Cricket in new Zealand for a decade. Through that time he has had a number of roles, but these days he spends his time overseeing the coaching programme.
Batting Tips: Score More Runs with Unfair Net Practice
Here's a problem: Batting is unfair, batting practice is too fair.
What do I mean?
The biggest frustration of batting is getting out. One mistake and it's over, even if it's the first ball you have faced of the season. Yet when we go to a net practice we all do 10-20 minutes no matter what happens and walk away satisfied that we got a good hit.
The problem, then, is when you practice you feel no pressure and when you bat in a game you feel all the pressure. There is a huge disconnect and your practice time is wasted. It leads to losing focus, playing poor shots and fewer runs.
The solution is simple: make practice unfair.
More Runs with These Shot Selection Drills
Before you can smash that half volley through the covers for a searing boundary, you need to pick up the half volley. That's shot selection in action and - as batsmen and coaches - we should never take it for granted.
But how do you train for shot selection?
Learning the technique of a shot is much easier. You are moving. You can get feedback. You can drill repeatedly until you get it right. But it's hard to come up with "drills" for a process that only goes on in your head: While you are identifying the line and length of the ball, and then choosing a shot, you are not doing anything with your body.
Fortunately, it's simple to integrate shot selection specific drills into your normal training. Here's some things you can do.
Bowling Faster: Why Correcting Technique is Harder Than it Looks
You want to bowl fast, so you change your action to correct flaws and you get more pace. Easy, right?
Wrong.
Bowling Tactics: How to "Bowl Dry"
Frustration: An underrated way to get wickets, and enormously effective at any level. In recent years, this has been called “squeezing” or “bowling dry”.
How do you bowl dry this way?
Playing as a Unit: How to Use a Cricket Cliche to Improve your Cricket Team
International players and coached these days are always going on about how they “performed as a unit” – fielded, batted, bowled.
Lurking in the depths of this moribund press talk is a grain of truth we can use at any level.
How to Enjoy Fielding
Fielding, especially for young players, is the ugly sister of playing cricket.
Specialist fielding: Boundary fielding
Fielding in the deep can feel like a lonely place.
