This is from Mr Boycott...
The next question's a technical one. It's from Ranganath Potluri, who has written in from the USA. He is an opener and wants to know: which is the more technically correct way of playing: side-on or open? He plays open and defends the ball with bat in front and body as cover behind the bat. What are the pros and cons of the two techniques, and what would you advise?
GB: First of all, I would always say to somebody: whatever is comfortable or whatever allows you to get runs. Your job as a batsman is to make runs, your job as a bowler is to take wickets. How the hell you do it doesn't matter. But if you have an open stance against right-arm over the wicket bowlers, you'll be in a great position to pull and hook the ball, sweep and play through the on side, because you are already opened up and ready for it. It might be more difficult to score on the off side. You've got to make up your mind on which is best.
As for a side-on stance, nearly all great batsmen, from time immemorial, have been side-on players. Whether it's been Don Bradman in Australia; Jack Hobbs, Wally Hammond and Len Hutton in England; Sachin Tendulkar in India; Jacques Kallis among the current players; Sunil Gavaskar in the past; George Headley, Brian Lara and Viv Richards. It is important when left-arm bowlers bowl over the wicket, that you do open up a little bit. Perhaps get further across your stumps, because the ball is going across you and it's a very awkward angle. So you play a little further over your stumps to play the ball back from whence it came.
For left-handed batsmen it is different. Around 80-90% of the bowlers bowl over the wicket, so the ball is always going across you. It's a little like a right-handed batsman facing a left-arm seamer - it's going across you at an angle. I'm telling you as a right-hand batsman to open up a bit more chest-on so that you can face the bowlers a bit more with your shoulders and body. For left-handers it is very important to open up a little bit, because while facing right-arm bowlers it's coming at a similar angle. The great batsmen have always been side-on but you have to find whatever gets you runs.
I think the indication from what the Yorkshire Ripper said is that trying to stay side on is preferable as it allows you to play all around the park - if it is good enough for the greats and all that...