Case Study Profile: Pat
Pat is the first player in the harrowdrive.com case study series this year.
Pat is a 37 year old all rounder playing in the WEPL Wiltshire Division in the UK. Pat bats and bowls averaging around 20 last year in each discipline. He is captain of the side.
Mental Skills
Pat essential plays for the fun of the game but is keen to succeed and prepared to put in work away from the pitch to do so. This is an excellent starting point.
The online pavilion: Why every club cricketer should use twitter
Would you like this site to be more personal to you and your cricket? miCricketCoach exists to serve your needs so I'm trying to find out what they are. In short I want to have more 2 way conversations with you. That's where Twitter comes in.
Twitter as the online pavilion
Has Twenty20 changed club cricket?
I'm pretty sure Jeremy Snape wasn't referring to club cricket when he said this:
Warning: Is your cricket club losing kids?
Recently I saw a coaching session that seemed to be designed not for the kids to have fun but for the coaches to impress their own will to win.
I can just imagine the drop out rate.
The reason kids come to play cricket, in my view, is to have fun. Winning is a factor but without the enjoyment more will leave than stay.
How do good coaches go about this while still teaching the skills of the game?
Keep everyone involved
Would you attend a mental skills session for cricket with Jeremy Snape?
I'm not sure how many chin ups Jeremy Snape can do, but when it comes to exercising your mind there is no one better in cricket.
Jeremy is a friend of the site and it's his benefit year at Leicestershire. He is putting on all sorts of top events this year in the UK and has asked if you, dear reader, wants to attend one.
How the number 5 will make you a better cricketer
Is there some sort of magic to the number 5 in cricket?
If you look hard enough there is always magic to numbers. In the case of the number 5 it's a handy tool to make you think more about your cricket training.
5 hours per week
John Berardi is a big advocate of training a minimum of 5 hours a week to see improvements. There is no reason this can't be extrapolated to cricket too.
“Am I bovvered?” How to beat your own laziness once and for all
Do you often make big plans to improve your game only to find yourself acting like Catherine Tate's Lauren?
I found myself there this morning.
I felt like I had no energy as I headed to the gym and after warming up my first couple of sets were way below par. I gave in and headed for the shower after about 20 minutes instead of my usual hour.
What was causing this lethargy?
You can’t improve what you don’t measure
Cricket is a statisticians dream. Every aspect of a cricketer's performance is measured by statistics. The great players are often separated from the good players based on statistics.
For those that did not get a chance to witness the great Don Bradman bat, the only way they know he was perhaps the best batsman that ever lived was in is amazing batting average of 99.94.