Cricket: front foot

Test cricket rewards patience. The great innings aren't about strike rates or boundary counts - they're about time at the crease, weathering difficult periods, and being there at the end.

Yet in a cricket landscape dominated by franchise T20, developing batters who can concentrate for six hours is increasingly challenging. The skills that win T20s can undermine Test performance.

The Concentration Challenge

Test batting demands a different mental approach than limited-overs cricket:

Time perception: T20 batters think in terms of balls remaining. Test batters think in sessions. The mental framework is fundamentally different.

Risk calculation: In T20, the risk of getting out is weighed against run rate requirements. In Tests, the risk of getting out is weighed against nothing - survival is its own value.

Attention spans: Modern players have grown up with constant stimulation. The quiet periods in Test cricket - between balls, between overs - feel longer to brains trained for rapid input.

Building Concentration Capacity

Concentration is trainable. Like any skill, it develops through progressive overload:

Extended net sessions: Move beyond the typical 20-minute net. Build towards sessions lasting 60-90 minutes, simulating the physical and mental demands of Test batting.

Simulation practice: Create match scenarios with realistic rest periods between overs, drink breaks, and the rhythm of Test cricket. The training environment should mirror match conditions.

Mindfulness training: Simple meditation practices improve the ability to sustain attention and return focus when it wanders. Even 10 minutes daily builds the mental muscle.

Ball-by-Ball Focus

Elite Test batters don't concentrate for six hours continuously. They concentrate intensely for each delivery, then release.

The cycle:

  1. As bowler begins run-up: increase focus
  2. At delivery: peak concentration
  3. After the ball: release, breathe, reset
  4. Between overs: complete mental break

This rhythm prevents the exhaustion that comes from trying to maintain constant high concentration. The releases are as important as the focus periods.

Managing Difficult Periods

Every Test innings includes periods where survival is the only goal - new ball spells, turning pitches, tricky light. Mental strategies for these phases:

Shrink the game: Don't think about session targets or day totals. Focus only on the next ball. The rest takes care of itself.

Process goals: Rather than outcome goals (don't get out), focus on process goals (watch the ball onto the bat, move feet first). Process focus is controllable; outcomes aren't.

Positive self-talk: When survival becomes dominant, the internal voice often turns negative. Consciously redirect to positive or neutral statements.

Technical Adjustments for Test Cricket

Test batting technique differs from T20 in key ways:

Leave the ball: The ability to not play is crucial. Knowing when a ball doesn't need a response and having the discipline to not respond.

Defensive solidity: The forward defence, often neglected in white-ball cricket, becomes a primary scoring shot. Dead bat, soft hands, ball dropping safely.

Back foot options: Against quality bowling, the back foot punch and cut become essential. These shots require less risk than drives against moving balls.

Rotation: Singles keep the scoreboard moving and the mind engaged. Running also creates mini-breaks in concentration.

Practice Structures

Survival innings: Set a target of time rather than runs. "Face 100 balls" rather than "score 50 runs." Judge success by duration, not productivity.

Consequence practice: Create consequences for dismissal - extra fitness work, loss of batting position, whatever motivates. Match-like pressure improves match-like performance.

Video review focus: After practice innings, review the deliveries you got out to in recent matches. Recreate those specific scenarios and practise survival responses.

Physical Preparation

Mental stamina connects to physical stamina. Long innings require:

Aerobic fitness: The ability to maintain light activity for extended periods without fatigue

Core endurance: Hours in batting stance stresses the lower back. Build endurance, not just strength

Nutrition strategies: What to eat and drink during breaks to maintain energy without causing sluggishness

Heat/humidity tolerance: Training in challenging conditions builds resilience for Test cricket environments

Key Coaching Points

  • Concentration is a skill that can be trained through progressive overload
  • Focus intensely on each ball, then release completely between
  • Shrink the game during difficult periods - next ball only
  • Technical adjustments for Test cricket differ from T20
  • Physical preparation underpins mental stamina

Drills for Batting Development

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front foot ANSWERS
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How do I stop no balls?

Hi guys. My name is Jack im from Australia. im having areal problem with my bowling. i am bowling heaps of no balls like 5 or 6 per game and it is really getting to me. my dad has tryed to help me but its not working. i used to have 9 steps but because of my no-balls ive changed. im using 10 at the moment but am not sure what to do. can you please help???

Sportplan Team Coach, United Kingdom

how to play a front foot drive?

how to play a front foot drive?

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Which drills can I use to correct the front foot from bending i.e right hand bowler?

Which drills can I use to correct the front foot from bending? I'm a right-handed bowler.

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How to stop my U12s using their bottom hand and hitting the ball up?

Ask a question and have it answered by Coaches from around the world and Sportplan's team of Experts.

Archived User Coach

show me some drills for front foot shorts defense drive?

show me some drills for front foot shorts defense drive and flick

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i am playing very well in the offside and in onside?

i am playing very well in the offside and in onside behind the square but it is really tuf to play in onside in front of the square what can i do?

Archived User Coach

hi, i have proplem faceing fast bowler, and my bat comes slow, my front foot gets there quicker but my bat comes slow. how cn i improve that?

hi, i have proplem faceing fast bowler, and my bat comes slow, my front foot gets there quicker but my bat comes slow. how cn i improve that?

Archived User Coach

my foot work is excellent but i have a poor timing?

my foot work is excellent but i have a poor timing please give me easy tips to improve my timing.

Archived User Coach

I am preety short all rounder. In my batting i m facing?

I am preety short all rounder. In my batting i m facing diffiuclty of playing against the spinners and i can't play the leg sid balls the reason is that i m scare it might hit on my lower part of body. So any drills to solve this kind of problems?

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How to reduce bowling no balls and how to increase bowling speed if...?

How To Reduce Bowling No Balls And How To Increase My Bowling Speed If I Am Having High Arm Jumping Action.

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Batsman more strong on the offside but weaker on legs

What is the best method/drills to make some runs on the onside? Youngster scored back to back tons with 90% on the off side?

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Playing in swinging deliveries

I have a problem while opening my legs to play an on drive or a delivery swinging in and coming into me. I can play the off side shots well but have a problem on the leg side for pacers. Any advice please?

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how to bowl faster with short run up and keys to bowl fast

how can i bowl faster with short runup and what are techniques to bowl faster.

pratyush Coach, India

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sir! i'm left handed batsmen, struggle to play good length balls.

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How to play a yorker with front foot drive ?

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Batter collapsing his/her back...

Why do some batters collapse their back leg when driving off front foot. How do you stop it?

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