Cricket: cricket rounders

Catching is the skill that converts bowling pressure into wickets. A dropped catch not only costs the wicket but can demoralise bowlers and lift opposition batters. Elite teams invest significant practice time in catching drills across all positions and situations.

High Catching Technique

Dealing with skied balls:

Early positioning: Getting under the ball quickly to make final adjustments.

Hands position: Creating a basket with fingers pointing up for balls above the head.

Watching into hands: Tracking the ball all the way into the catch.

Calling: Clear communication to avoid collisions and confusion.

Slip Catching Fundamentals

Ready position: Low stance with weight forward, hands together.

Soft hands: Absorbing the ball rather than snatching at it.

Reaction time: Watching the edge, not the release point.

Lateral movement: Covering ground to both sides efficiently.

Close Catching Positions

Short leg: Low stance, quick reactions to bat-pad chances.

Silly point: Protecting the face while maintaining catching readiness.

Gully: Wider position requiring lateral diving ability.

Leg slip: Reading the ball off the bat for deflections down leg.

Outfield Catching

Ground coverage: Running to get under high hits to the boundary.

Sliding catches: Safe technique for diving forward or sideways.

Over-the-shoulder: Catching while running away from the wicket.

Boundary awareness: Knowing where the rope is without looking.

Key Coaching Points

  • Catching practice should be part of every training session
  • Position-specific drills develop specialist catching skills
  • Soft hands prevent spilled catches at slip
  • Communication prevents collisions and dropped catches
  • Mental preparation helps players stay focused for long spells

Drills for Catching Development

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How would you teach rounders (...

To a girl with Cerebral Palsy. She has a walker allowing handsfree activities.

Archived User Coach

Ideas for Game Scenarios | Spo...

I ran a coaching session on Sunday where I took along a number of handwritten cards, from which the kids (U11s) could randomly choose "Super Over", "Bowl Off" or "Game Scenario". If they chose the latter, I had another set of cards they could choose from "Wicket Target", "Run Target", "Run Target - but boundaries don't count".Finally, they then draw from some more cards - runs (20-30), max wickets (1-3), overs (3-5).Each game scenario lasted around 10-20 mins, so in our session, we had time for about 4 or 5 scenarios. They appeared to enjoy it, but most of them said they wanted to bowl/bat individually for longer! Kids, eh?The idea behind these if to get them thinking about batting intelligently - rotating the strike, keeping the score ticking over, managing achievable run rates, etc. It's also a chance to give some of them some experience at captaining and having to make key decisions (bowling and batting order, how to place a field for different scenarios).Any ideas for variations I could try would be welcome. My session lasts for 2 hours including warm ups and any specific exercises I want to do beforehand.

Matt OToole Coach, England

this question is for people wh...

hi!! to all my dear coaches and people assosiated with this website. i am 20 years old and i am a right arm medium fast bowler and a right arm middle order batsmen from india. i like to hit the ball all over the park as i am a natural hitter of the cricket ball.well i am facing problems with my bowling action as i am not able to practice every day, so there is always gap of 2 or 3 days between my practice sessions,so whenever i go and start bowling in the nets i always get confused and sometimes i even have to start allover again starting from my action!!!i even dont have a coach but i am determined to make to my international squad,every one laughs at me when i say this to them.i have never played a single match till now with the proper cricket ball.but i am hugely appreciated in the nets while i am bowling, as i can swing the bowl both ways with an average speed of 115-120kmph.here in india its very hard for a young player to come up in this game even if he has loads of talent,but no money,i am not even allowed to get into the nets when other clubs are practicing, beacause of that i have to practice before they come, that is from morning 4.00am to 6.00am.and i have to study as well because i am computer science engineer, which is a huge mental pressure as well,so i am not able to practice every day.well thats not an execuse for me though, because no matter how hard it gets i am gonna make to the IPL(indian premier league)and then to my international team.and just a month ago i have been picked by a new local club who were quite impressed by me,i played my first practice match against our oppositon club of under 23 age group,i scored 16 balls 42runs,and got 4 wickets of my four overs and concided 11 runs so i am really happy, i was able to swing the ball both the ways but my problem is whenever there is break in my practice session,as other club people dont allow me in the nets. i cant take my run up properly and i tend to change my action from side on to front on which decreses my speed . so plss give some sugessions on 1.how to take my run up properly. 2.how to increase my bowling speed. 3.how to bowl accurately without changing my action.

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