someblokecalleddave
Well-Known Member
Re: Leg Spin
Cheers Tom, I had a look at that - "Leg spin is hard work but immensely rewarding. The best bowling practice is done away from batsman and flying balls. Get 6 balls and bowl over after over on your own in the nets (or better still to a keeper out in the middle) until you find an easily repeatable stock delivery". This is what I'm currently working on with the top spinner as previously mentioned. Although I did spend all summer working with the flipper, but I seem to have had problems with it and inconsistency with the delivery, so have shoved that to one side for the moment. Having said that I throw a few every now and then and it's a good ball to have I reckon? It seems that not being so hung up on being good at it and only using it every now and then seems to have improved my delivery with it. Additionally (And I'd be interested in hearing other peoples opinion on this) I've started pitching it at the stumps rather than wide of off. I find I can make the flipper turn acutely like a leg break on all sorts of surfaces with all sorts balls, but then faced with cricket pitches here in the UK this summer I couldn't get it to happen? Does anyone else use the flipper and find that it turns like a standard leg break?
"I always feel that leg spinners should threaten the stumps and risk being driven. Bowling short is the real killer for leggies so avoid that at all costs. If you can get hold of the ECB Wings To Fly 2 DVD that would help you an enormous amount".
Again this is something I've adopted having tried to be Shane Warne all summer and pitching the ball wide of off to be knocked for fours or given as wides. This is what the old bloke did that came away with the 7 maiden overs - pitching the ball at the stumps.
The short ball issue that's interesting - what would constitute a short ball?
Cheers Tom, I had a look at that - "Leg spin is hard work but immensely rewarding. The best bowling practice is done away from batsman and flying balls. Get 6 balls and bowl over after over on your own in the nets (or better still to a keeper out in the middle) until you find an easily repeatable stock delivery". This is what I'm currently working on with the top spinner as previously mentioned. Although I did spend all summer working with the flipper, but I seem to have had problems with it and inconsistency with the delivery, so have shoved that to one side for the moment. Having said that I throw a few every now and then and it's a good ball to have I reckon? It seems that not being so hung up on being good at it and only using it every now and then seems to have improved my delivery with it. Additionally (And I'd be interested in hearing other peoples opinion on this) I've started pitching it at the stumps rather than wide of off. I find I can make the flipper turn acutely like a leg break on all sorts of surfaces with all sorts balls, but then faced with cricket pitches here in the UK this summer I couldn't get it to happen? Does anyone else use the flipper and find that it turns like a standard leg break?
"I always feel that leg spinners should threaten the stumps and risk being driven. Bowling short is the real killer for leggies so avoid that at all costs. If you can get hold of the ECB Wings To Fly 2 DVD that would help you an enormous amount".
Again this is something I've adopted having tried to be Shane Warne all summer and pitching the ball wide of off to be knocked for fours or given as wides. This is what the old bloke did that came away with the 7 maiden overs - pitching the ball at the stumps.
The short ball issue that's interesting - what would constitute a short ball?