Adapting cricket drills: Improving skill practice
This article is part of a series designed to show you how to adapt cricket drills for your needs. To see the full list of articles in this series click here.
Drills that are designed to groove skills already learned rather than teach from scratch are the focus of this article.
Here we are going to assume that a player can perform the skill and have a feel for it, they just want to get better at it.
Cricket Basic 113 (Batting): Don't Complain About LBWs
113. Never complain about LBWs going against you – if you had hit the ball with the middle of the bat then there would have been no appeal.
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Tactics you should be using: Leave the field up
Knowing when to leave a fielder up or push him back is quite the art.
Do it too early and you give away easy runs or miss a chance to take a wicket. Do it too late and it costs you big.
Tactically aware bowlers seem to have this 6th sense, Jedi mind trick to know when to do it. But it’s more a conundrum to others.
Working in the grey area
Here’s your chance to play at the Cape Town International Cricket Academy
As you know, South African supercoach Ryan Maron is a friend of PitchVision Academy.
And in 2011 he is giving the chance to PitchVision Academy readers to change their cricketing fortunes with 2 months in Cape Town.
Have you ever wondered how good you could be with the right coaching in top-class facilities?
The Cape Town International Cricket Academy is an intense cricket training experience in the hands of top international coaches. These coaches are:
Fielding Drills: Wall catching
Purpose: To develop better reactions and close catching technique. This is a simple but effective drill for any age or skill level to groove close catching skills.
Description: Fielders get into pairs facing the wall. The fielder furthest from the wall underarm throws the ball so it bounces off the wall for his or her partner to catch it.
Cricket Basic 112 (Batting): Don't Be Tempted by Short Boundaries
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What every coach ought to know about training 11 year old cricketers
This article is part 3 of the “How to use fitness training to make better young cricketers” series. Click here to go to part 1.Click here to go to part 2.
Free video reveals: What happened on tour in Birmingham
PitchVision Academy has been touring the UK giving real players the chance to get coaching and instant feedback using the PitchVision sensor system.
And someone had the bright idea of videoing it all. We forgot the old adage "what goes on tour, stays on tour".
Birmingham cricketers give rave reviews at PitchVision Academy Live!
Adapting cricket drills: Improving skill development
This article is part of a series designed to show you how to adapt cricket drills for your needs. In this part we look at ways of increasing the speed of learning new skills. To see the full list of articles in this series click here.
You don’t have to be a kid to learn a skill but frankly, mostly it is kids.