Friday 9 November 2012

The Socialism Of Fast Bowling

I hate to be an old git about this, when I'm actually not. But I hanker after the 'old' days when the West Indies had 4, 5 maybe 6 genuine quick bowlers and scared the complete **** out of batsmen around the world.

Watching fast bowling today reminds me of watching something sanitised and put into boxes. It reeks of a standardising of quality and a multiplicity of sameness.

In political terms, this is a socialism of fast bowling where everyone must have the same, all should be the same and even look the same. "Get the wrist strong, shape the ball away, hit the right areas, pitch the ball up"... if you simply say this over and over, you may even end up as a bowling coach yourself. 

But bowling fast isn't about any of those things. That's because they are outcomes and not processes. And the truth is, we have lost the ability to actually coach speed - or at least understand the process that makes a fast bowler bowl fast in the first place.

Bowling fast is what the West Indies had. No one ever said to the West Indies "Get the wrist strong, shape the ball away, hit the right areas, pitch the ball up"... instead their mantra was bowl at 100mph and let the batsman negotiate the ball.

Watching Day 1 of the Aus v SA Test series showed exactly what I am talking about with pace bowling and where it has got to. However, the socialism of fast bowling starts way, way before this level and runs deep into junior coaching psyche. Is it any wonder that the robotic, repetitive averageness of fast-medium bowling is winning through? 

I have spent the past 18 months coaching on and off in India. I have seen bowlers with the passion to bowl fast being actively discouraged from trying to. The coaches instead preferring the socialism of fast bowling where no actual coaching needs to be done.

And this for me, is at the heart of it all.

If we can tick boxes, repeat mantras, pass coaching over to strength & conditioning, measure and manage players in the gym, focus on diets and nutrition, pay more interest in the mental side of the game, and lay out hundreds of cones, ski poles, gadgets and targets INSTEAD OF coaching speed into pace bowlers, then all is good with the game.

But the truth is all of that must be done ALONG SIDE coaching speed. Otherwise we have all the trimmings, but no turkey. We have all the tinsel but no Xmas tree. We have all the box ticking, but no fast bowlers.

Day 1 of the Test match showed a peppering of mid-130s kph (84 mph) deliveries. What's happened to the 150-155 kph (mid 90 mph) bowlers? 

For all the technology, training, props and gadgets, gym work, S&C, mantras and "get the wrist strong, shape the ball away, hit the right areas, pitch the ball up".... we have a complete levelling of the playing field in speed terms. And that is the problem.

Sanitisation or the socialism of fast bowling is now endemic. Coaches are being groomed to continue down this path. Educators actively pass on the methodology of blandness, mistakenly believing it to be excellence.

It would be time, before pace bowling is a lost art, to have a moratorium on speed and open the minds up to the truth that you can and you must coach the processes of fast bowling. It starts with understanding. It begins with knowing how to coach speed into bowlers and not out of them, as we appear to be witnessing in world cricket right now.

It's why I wrote Ultimate Pace Secrets https://shop.maverickscricket.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=BOOK003 and it's why I watch Test cricket with a sense of depression that fast bowling is starting to look like it's consigned to an earlier age when speed, and scaring the batsman, used to be part of a bowler's weaponry.

Speed and control are not exclusive. You can have both. The West Indies did. And you can coach both side by side. 

Let's start teaching speed. For the sake of mediocrity if nothing else and end this socialism of fast bowling that is a disservice to a whole generation.




Thursday 8 November 2012

No Good Knocking If No One's Home

I read today that Craig McDermott is going to take the 'injury prevention' video analysis around Australia to help identify potential issues in fast bowlers.

I saw this and thought that as obvious as this should be anyway, why is it that Cricket Australia isn't educating coaches in the first place? But I don't really want to single CA out to be fair to them. Even though the issues over Cummins have been well documented, and even though CA appeared to have left Cummins alone without correcting his lateral flexion and misalignment until it has finally caused a major problem, it still doesn't make them unique.

In fact, it simply makes them part of the vast majority who coach fast bowling, yet do not come to grips with teaching speed correctly or work out how to avoid injury properly.

The list is long. And the list is accepted as the 'norm'.

The Fast Bowler's Bible in 2006 and Ultimate Pace Secrets in 2012, explain and show how all of this is done correctly. Perhaps the international boards should read this stuff, buy a copy for every coach in their land, and thus educate on teaching fast bowling the right way. It would be far cheaper and less hassle than to go around correcting mistakes being made and having to restructure, rehab and redevelop bowlers AFTER they have had issues.

I think that one day, the penny will drop, but I might have a big beard by then.