Cricket coaching, fitness and tips | PitchVision Academy

How to become your captain's 'go to' bowler

Ian Botham, it was often said, was England’s ‘go to’ bowler. He made things happen. He took wickets. Famously he often did it without bowling as well as others.

Beefy just had that magical touch.

While it would be impossible to plan to bowl a rank long hop that gets hit straight to backward point, there are some elements we can take from great go to bowlers of the past.

Medicine Ball Training (Part 2)

 And now for the HARD part!
Remember - you only get out of an exercise what you are willing and able to put into the exercise!

 

Agility Drill: Drills for After warm-up

Try some of these after you've warmed up and done your basics. Always good to have some new drills to work at to keep things fresh! 

 

Agility Star Drill

This is a GREAT clip! No fancy shoes or tracksuits...no flash training field....just some cones, some committed trainers trying to get better and a MANIC coach screaming at them! LOVE IT! WILL SOMEBODY PLEASE FIX HIS CONE?!!!!

 

Ladder and Hurdle Drill

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These guys are not just focussing on the technique - they are also trying to do each drill - and every rep of each drill - as fast as possible.

Something to measure your performances against! KEEP WORKING!!

 

Sprinting Technique Drills

Some more demonstrations of drills....sorry about the music. Turn the sound down and just read. Lookn at the bounding stuff and practise it on yor own...arm in lines not across your body!

 

 

 

 

How to get more wickets with swing bowling

Picture the scene. You are at the end of your run up. Conditions are in your favour and the ball has been swinging. Slips, gulley and the wicketkeeper are waiting.

You have been pitching the ball up a little further to encourage it to move but so far the batsman has been on top of you, hitting three drives through the gap at cover. He’s 12 not out.

You are not worried.

5 simple exercises to help you unravel the mystery of core training for cricket

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Nobody knows what the core is.

Is it your abs? Your deep musculature? Your lower back? Your shoulders? Your bum?

Try and find common textbook definition and you fail. Everyone has an idea what the core is, but it’s hard to find agreement on what exactly it is.

Add to this, the ability of the core area to do more than one thing and no wonder there is so much myth and confusion around core training to improve cricket.

So let's get back to basics.

If cricket is 80% mental, why do we spend so little time on those skills?

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Cricket and golf have a lot in common: sports that go on in the head as much as in the body.

For example, there is a story about a famous golfer who lost his form. He decided to seek one of the finest golf coaches in the world to sort out his technique.

The coach took the player to the driving range with a bucket of balls and asked him to show him his swing. The coach sat down on a chair and watched as the player hit a few balls.

How to improve your running between the wickets

In two simple practice sessions your club side could make dramatic improvements in both speed between the wickets and judgement of runs. That could lead to an extra 50 runs per innings in an afternoon match.

These sessions can be run by coaches or captains and don’t require much equipment beyond normal cricket stuff.

After warming up, this is how you do it.

Practice session one: Improving technique

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