Players.bio is a large online platform sharing the best live coverage of your favourite sports: Football, Golf, Rugby, Cricket, F1, Boxing, NFL, NBA, plus the latest sports news, transfers & scores. Exclusive interviews, fresh photos and videos, breaking news. Stay tuned to know everything you wish about your favorite stars 24/7. Check our daily updates and make sure you don't miss anything about celebrities' lives.

Contacts

  • players.bio

Power-hitting coaches will soon be the norm, says batting guru

NEW DELHI : If bowlers increasingly become cannon fodder in Twenty20 cricket, people like Julian Wood might be to blame.

For the former Hampshire batsman is constantly studying sports like baseball, tennis and even hurling for any input that can help a batsman hit the ball harder and farther.

Wood has joined Punjab Kings as their power-hitting coach in the Indian Premier League (IPL), bringing with him a decade of research into how batters can improve their chances of hitting the ball out of the park.

"The game is changing," the 53-year-old told Reuters.

"As a coach you've got to change with it, and as a player you have to evolve if you want to be playing at the top level."

By evolving, Wood means hitting more fours and sixes, and this is where specialised power-hitting coaches come into the picture.

"I've looked at baseball, hurling and tennis and I've looked at how they hit a ball," he said.

"I looked at their movements and I've married it all together so you can incorporate that into batting."

Wood's training tools typically include a bungee rope, a hurling stick and sometimes even a claw hammer.

The bungee rope tethers a batter's rear hip to a pole to get his torso more involved in shot-making.

Wood gets batters to swing the claw hammer sideways with their bottom hand so their wrists cock better when whacking the ball.

And the 'hurley' helps unlock a batter's wrist power.

"When I look at hurling, I realised you got a lot of energy stored in your wrists that we don't really use," Wood explained.

"The hurling stick is very thin and light, it encourages them to feel the energy stored in their wrists."

Punjab's batsmen hit a combined 93 sixes in 14 matches last season but have improved that rate by clearing the rope 65 times in eight

Read more on channelnewsasia.com
DMCA