How This Village Team are Like First-Class Cricketers | Cricket coaching, fitness and tips

How This Village Team are Like First-Class Cricketers

Waltham St Lawrence in the leafy English county of Berkshire is not a place you expect to find a redefinition of cricket. Somehow, that’s exactly what has happened.

The team are throwing off the traditional culture of village cricket in an effort to do better in their matches. Slowly, they are moving away from the old-fashioned way. The team are adapting proven methods from the first-class game to turn them from recreational to competitive.

The evil mastermind behind the scheme is player Matt Connor. As he got older and realised he wanted to continue playing cricket for Waltham St Lawrence as long as possible. He started looking around for ways to improve. He stumbled across PitchVision Academy.

Combined with his rugby background and a burning desire, the ideas on the site planted a seed in his mind to start a fitness programme that would keep him fit through the summer months. He began training with minimal equipment and just a couple of other players.

The three of them blazed a trail in the cold winter months, knowing the hard work would pay off later during the season. It worked so well that the following winter saw numbers of players at preseason training dramatically swell.

A new culture was born.
 

Now if you go to the Oak Meadow playing field in winter you will see something very different from the traditional image of village cricketers. You now see players training hard and improving their fitness in a highly specific way. If you look quickly you might think it’s the local first-class side having a change of scenery. In fact, it’s guys who have to pay for the pleasure of turning out for the team. They want to get their money’s worth.

It works well because it’s been designed with cricket in mind and doesn’t need expensive equipment. The players get together on the outfield and prepare with:

The programme has been designed to bring maximum crossover to the pitch, and come the summer the team will be streets ahead by being fitter with less injuries.

Plus, they are working hard on cricket skills that are neglected at this level:

  • The team think about running between the wicket (which ties in nicely to sprint and interval training). An extra run per over in quick singles is a lot in an afternoon match.
  • They work on bowler’s ability to bowl in overs (rather than in turns in the nets) and set fields to make practice more realistic.
  • And, horror of horrors, they actually do some fielding practice. In some village sides that’s practically a sackable offence.

Of course, there is a long way to go. The culture of training doesn’t change in a couple of seasons. But the kids in the colts section are growing up with the idea that cricketers get fit to play (not play to get fit) and have to work on a range of skills.

That bodes well for this village team and raises standards that others have to match.

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Comments

OK, so one of my teams starts pre-season nets in two weeks (I think 8 weeks of 2 hours). I'm not in charge per se, but generally if I make some drill suggestions they're warmly received.

Fitness isn't too much of an issue, but the three Ts (technique, tactics and teamwork) could all do with some work before the season starts.

We have an (awkward?) mixture of senior players who probably prefer to just use the nets to play themselves into a little form before the season, and somewhat inexperienced youngsters who still need plenty of coaching and guidance if they are to reach their potential.

Any tips/ideas about the kind of thing we could be doing? Either for fielding drills that will bring the most benefit for our groundfielding/throwing/catching, or what I should get the batsmen and bowlers to work on whilst netting to help them focus and prepare properly for the season. I have some ideas, but extra opinions would be very welcome.

For fielding often the best way is to incorporate them in the warm up or use a theme. I have similar issues where some are happy to do fielding/fitness work with others only really there to net. I find by keeping it simple but making it competitive you keep the moaning to a minimum and you achieve what you want.

The balance has to be right as well in a two hour slot, 30 minutes of fielding and 90 minutes of netting seems about right. However, you can vary it as needed.

As for batsman/bowlers the best thing is to stimulate match play as closely as possible. Give the bats/bowlers a field plan and get them to play to it (laminate an A4 sheet with an outline of a pitch and then you can draw field places on it). Use cones in the net to show gaps and get the bats to aim for those gaps.

Bat in pairs with the emphasis on quick singles - either using cones so runs are scored in the gaps or against the bowler.

Bowlers can be told to work on different lines/lengths or a particular target. Yorker/bouncer/slower ball sessions help. Get bowlers to bowl 3 balls in a row rather than in turn.

Scenarios are also good - opening, coming in 1st wicket down with score at 15 for 1 of 7 overs etc. Let some players bat with two different partners.

If you have spare nets then get bats to work in pairs with soft balls and practice shots. Likewise, bowlers can work without bats.

Hopefully, some ideas there but I think the key is to keep things simple, focussed and as close to match play as possible.

Thanks, some good suggestions there. Here were a few of my ideas:

have one session with a scenario where the batsmen are told to imagine we need thirty to win in 10 overs, but only have 2 wickets left, so simply look to score at 3 an over without taking any chances. The bowlers are encouraged to go all out for wickets by bowling with hostility and mixing in plenty of variation.

have a separate session with a scenario where we need eighty to win off 10 overs with 8 wickets in hand, so batsmen are told to try to hit two boundaries an over. Bowlers are given a field and their task is to try to ensure that the ball is hit to the fielders, preferably in the air. The field changes dramatically (legside, offside, straight, behind square) every few overs to see how both batsmen and bowlers are able to adapt.

finally, have a third session where we put the nets away, and use two batsmen at a time playing tip and run with real fielders trying to run them out. The fielders are restricted to different areas of the hall to encourage the batsmen to practice using different angles.

All of those sound good and will work the players in different areas.