DeltaAlpha wrote:clubcricketeradi wrote:I have always given importance on basics (footwork and techniques) at club cricket. So i prefer innovating shots on the correct line than the wrong line if the situation demands. My personal belief is that there are enough basic strokes like straight bat, cover drive, square cut, late cut and innovative ones like reverse sweep for off stump line. So no point to try and hit across the lines until and unless the opposition has kept no fielder between DMW or Long on and the ball allows to get power over the in field.
The secretary of our club is the head coach. He was the one who coached us a decade back. However, he has gradually became the secretary. He now does most of the administrative tasks , like sponsorship deals, maintaining contacts with relevant people at MCA etc etc. There are about 5 assistant coaches who do the actual coaching.We used to play together for the same club about 15 years back. These assistant coaches are playing for our club continuously for 20 years and did not take a break as cricket is their career unlike me. They gradually progress from club cricketers to coaches. One of those clubmate who is now the assistant coach was observing me bat like they watch others as well, and he actually appreciated after the first nets session when i went to him and asked how was the nets.He said that you have done well for the first nets session. Then he watched me at nets for another few batting sessions and did not point me anything. Apart from him, i am also confident that i am sticking to the basics and playing innovating strokes on merits of the ball.
OK, first part first... I think what you're saying there, adi, is that you stick to the basics, and only play more adventurous shots when the ball is in the right place for you to do so. If the coach makes no comments, then presumably, in his eyes, you are getting it right, and all credit to you for that. But the thing is, when did you start to take this approach, how did you learn what "the basics" are and how did you learn when to play the more adventurous shots? Did you get a lot of help from the coaches when you were younger, or did it just come naturally? I seem to remember that you had taken quite a long break from playing, yet here you are doing fine again; that would imply the latter (i.e. it comes naturally) to me. What I'm trying to get at is just how important a role is fulfilled by coaches.
Yes, being a specialist batsman i have to stick to basics. I cannot get out cheaply like all rounders and specialist bowlers. Else, i would have lost my place in squad. So that pressure helped. But in 40 overs matches, the opponents score anywhere between 220 - 240 . Chasing that during winter is tough as the opening specialist bowlers get enough assistance. So the adventurous shorts are sometimes required in some chases. Sometimes not even a single unwanted short is required.
I started playing street cricket since about 5 years. There i used to play adventurous shorts. The i was introduce into club cricket by a club mate who is senior to me by age. I had three coaches in all because i played for three clubs when i was young. But most of my cricket coaching has happened at the club i am currently playing , which is also one of the 3 i played plenty years back.I don't remember the exact year but maybe i joined the first club about 17 years or so.In the nets at clubs, I practice adventurous strokes more during the last couple of round of my batting session. I do not try it early unlike at street cricket, because then i was worried that i get into habit of being impatient and trying too many things too quickly and playing into the hands of opposition. So when i bat in nets about first 40 balls are played normally. Then when the last two rounds come i say to myself it's ok to get out now but it's time to practice adventurous strokes. That is when i try to place the full ball on the stumps purposely to the third man, the reverse sweep against spinners, moving out of crease with full intent and trying to smack it over the infielders (nets stop the balls which are hit in arc of midwicket to covers). The idea is very aggressive batting 4 runs every ball in the last couple of rounds.
In short the adventurous shorts were learned in street cricket to start with, but when to play it and hot to play them effectively was learned at club cricket because the basics improved a lot there.
Abotu the basics, I learned basics by following ways:
(1)I used to do shadow batting. The shadow batting at the nets was done sometimes or few minutes.Similarly shadow batting was done before going on to bat in every match.
(2)The coaches used to tell to put the hard ball in the socks and suspend it and do controlled hitting with full face of bat. They used to tell to follow Sachin or Rahul when they show matches on TV. I used to do that by suspending it with help of rope and socks from the curtain rod which runs across the door.This practice was done for 10 - 20 minutes.
(3)The coaches used to tell to keep minimum gap between the bat and pad and other basics which you know about the head position, elbow position, bat flow, stance etc.
The basics were learned at club cricket. When i went to the club i realized that there are so many things regarding stance and understood the reason behind all that.By basics i mean stance, the head and elbow position, the footwork, analyzing whether the ball is to be hit, defended or well left, knowing the technique how to do a proper well left, using the back leg to cover the stumps while playing square cut etc where the LBW is taken out of equation to that type of delivery while playing stroke.
I was an all rounder at street cricket, but my coach gave me bowling in nets and never gave me to bowl in 20,40 or 50 overs matches. Maybe he thought my bowling was good only for street cricket standards. I mean i was taking wickets at street level fairly easily than some other bowlers but at club coaches treated me fit as purely specialist batsman at 4. I have not bowled even a single over in all the matches i have played at proper cricket.So right from the first club i just bowled in nets at every club but being treated as specialist batsman i also didn't give much attention to bowling basics. In fact my bowling action, regarding the jump was weird and now i feel i could not have sustained it over 40 and 50 overs. One coach told me but i could not change it even though i tried. Maybe the coaches kept on spotting it in nets that i could not change it and they thought it was not wise to use someone with that action as a bowler. So i never concentrated on bowling basics because i knew i was playing role of specialist batsmen. However, i used to try setting up batsmen in nets.
Therefore, i would say my batting skills improved due to good coaching. Without the inputs from coaches i might have been a good batsman only for street cricket but would have failed against specialist bowlers at club levels.So the coaches had a huge impact on my batting and i can attribute my runs to their coaching.Today when i think about it with more maturity, i feel i am lucky to have been their student and thankful to my coaches for whatever they have taught me.
In fielding probably i coached myself more in technical aspects.
The coaches did not had much say in fielding basics apart from slip fielding. I learned the long barrier by watching cricket on TV. I followed Jonty, Ponting and Gibbs and learned fielding basics and diving by watching them on TV and practicing diving at home. Then i used to read interviews of Jonty Rhodes and extract as much information from that. It was his interview where i learned how to use the toe positions and the importance of toe positions in fielding.
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What I'm trying to get at is just how important a role is fulfilled by coaches.
First i will take my example:
Yes, cricket skills came naturally to me because i did well in street cricket itself as a top order batsman, opening bowler and fielder. But copybook basics were definitely learnt at club cricket. Without copybook coaching i would not have been same specialist batsman and i would have been more inconsistent. Apart from the basics the mindset etc was changed by coach. At one club the coach used to do the job of umpiring when we played the 20 and 40 overs matches. He used to tell me whether i am approaching the innings/pacing innings properly or not. He liked the way i paced innings even though specialist batsman wicket used to fall at less average at other end.So those instance i guess he considered me as outright specialist batsmen and fit me as strategy for developing the team.So in short for me, they played a huge role for my development as a cricketer.
Now talking about how important coaches are to other cricketers:
I think for those who want to make cricket as a career, they have to be coached right from early age. There are so many mistakes that the young boys (aged 7 and above) do.It's obvious they do not know the right and wrong, they do not have the maturity to pace innings, they do not have the ability to think what the opponent aged 12 is thinking. Coaches have to impart these 7 year young kids and tell them more tricks and experience which they would otherwise learn slowly by aeging. So the young boys if coached get to know more at lesser age and do not have to wait and learn everything by experience. The other things can only come by experience but many things can be taught early.Without coaching the young boys at our club they will not survive in Mumbai U14 level cricket.They will not even make the probables selection or the second selection round that is taken by MCA.They will get rejected then and there and selectors can identify who has got coaching and is ready for the next level. From my observations of the kids at our club, without coaching some would never have been the batsmen they are now.There are two U14 boys who bat so well, i see them and i think the coaches are probably preparing them for three day and five day cricket.Such is their brilliance due to their own efforts motivated by coaches and their inputs.No way they can bat like that without coaching.The competition in Mumbai cricketing system is fierce than what it was in our younger days. I never planned for cricket as career so it was okay if i was not coached. However, i feel if one is thinking of making a career in cricket, coaches are a must, otherwise they cannot survive the opponents who are well trained and hardened by inputs of the astute coaches.
If cricket is not seen as career option coaching can be skipped, but if cricket is a career option coaching should start at the age of 7 or 8 at least. Otherwise from the Mumbai cricket system perspective they will not make the U-14 teams.
BTW, what exactly happened to Jimmy about his coach

Would like to know if Jimmy was taught wrong bowling and what wrong.
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