Custom Bats Cricket Forum
General Cricket => Cricket Training, Fitness and Injuries => Topic started by: InternalTraining on April 07, 2020, 08:10:03 PM
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Some batsmen have very fast hands. Jos Butler. Tom Benton. Etc. They whip around that 2-10/2-11 bat like it is nothing. In Benton's nets, his bat makes a whippy sound when he plays his shots. Lot of these big hitter rely on hand speed to generate that whippy action. Are there any drills that can help improve hand/bat speed? What do you guys think?
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Unweight the bat, watch the cricket academy on YouTube, start with you bat as you normally would, then unweight it and then let it flow through, instantly it will be better for your batspeed.
Also lighten your grip, if you grip too tight, you are tense, and can't swing the bat quickly.
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I watched this recently and thought it was useful
https://youtu.be/NbgPN7ELY1A
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Bowling machine, tennis balls and a half bat. Put on decent pace and try to hit your normal shots a little harder. Keeping your shape. Try that. Not for everyone.
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^ By "half bat", you mean a middling bat (thin bat)?
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Add weight to the back of the bat? Ben williams youtube put a video up recently.home drills or something
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^ By "half bat", you mean a middling bat (thin bat)?
Yup, I think people also call them “eye-in” bat. Half a bat really. Good fun too!
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Is it “hand speed” or is it really fast rotation?
Most of the force in rotational striking ie cricket and baseball comes from a really solid base and being ridiculously good at blocking the lead leg. In baseball this tends to be a straight leg similar to fast bowlers, cricketers often more a bent leg, but its rigid and being strong enough to transfer force into and around that rigid leg.
Get strong in your lower half, then get really good at rotational stuff, medicine balls are good for overload, but so is practicing hitting the ball hard / moving the bat quickly!
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This highlights the issue with drills for power hitting and hand speed for me
https://youtu.be/p1vXIb0jVeY
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Is it “hand speed” or is it really fast rotation?
Most of the force in rotational striking ie cricket and baseball comes from a really solid base and being ridiculously good at blocking the lead leg. In baseball this tends to be a straight leg similar to fast bowlers, cricketers often more a bent leg, but its rigid and being strong enough to transfer force into and around that rigid leg.
Get strong in your lower half, then get really good at rotational stuff, medicine balls are good for overload, but so is practicing hitting the ball hard / moving the bat quickly!
Great question!
It is fast hands I am after - Finch hitting a six over cover point doesn't really use a lot of rotational force; he utilizes powerful core and fast (powerful) hands.
Your point about "blocked" leg is well taken.
Do you think fast hands play any role in power hitting at all or am I going down the wrong path?
#powerhitting