Not much use for slips fielding, in my opinion.If you have money, Buy a crazy cach thing. It rebounds the ball off the net
If not, just get someone to hit the ball to do from a few feet back
Yeah, a good game of cuts and pulls is better than the old semi-circle with one person hitting catches back and forth. In fact, I've never quite seen the point of the semi-circle, unless you're taking a catch thrown from the opposite side of the semi-circle.Not much use for slips fielding, in my opinion.
Really think that the best way to get used to how balls come towards you in the slips is to have someone throwing overarm from 10-15m away from the bat, and have someone guiding/nicking the ball into a slip cordon. Do as much of that as you possible can.
If I see a coach implement the semi-circle for catches, it's curtains. Find it hard to take anything he says seriously.Yeah, a good game of cuts and pulls is better than the old semi-circle with one person hitting catches back and forth. In fact, I've never quite seen the point of the semi-circle, unless you're taking a catch thrown from the opposite side of the semi-circle.
It also depends on your reflexes (Ian Botham and Shane Warne, for example, could still have their hands on their knees when the ball was bowled) but for the common, garden-variety cricketer, make sure you're nice and low and have your hands at the ready. Also know what your keeper's capabilities are - we got caught out on Saturday, when I moved into slip for the latter part of the game. The keeper had gone wide for one earlier in the game so I went to a 1 1/2 slip position and he didn't go for the ensuing edge...
Not all slips are the same.I normally field in slips during a match. The problem is I normally drop a catch which is edged towards me. What should I do to improve my fielding in slips?
not true... if someone else can throw the ball at the net it is excellent practice.Not much use for slips fielding, in my opinion.
Really think that the best way to get used to how balls come towards you in the slips is to have someone throwing overarm from 10-15m away from the bat, and have someone guiding/nicking the ball into a slip cordon. Do as much of that as you possible can.
Good reaction work. Not training the specific skill of slips catching.not true... if someone else can throw the ball at the net it is excellent practice.
That's if a **** can hit it. 75% of the time, they don't.Anyone used one of these?
Perfectly designed to defy all laws of nature by causing a gently-thrown ball to double in pace and fly directly towards the head of the nearest small child.
Still watching the ball instead of the bat?Just to extend, I'm a specialist first slipper but have been moved to 2nd because the captain likes first (he's grassed a heap already, ffffff). I've struggled a bit at second, grassed one and missed one I usually would've got something on and would appreciate any advice towards to particular art of fielding at second.
Yeah, exactly why these are so much better. And because you can move them around much more easily; use them in warmups and that.That's if a **** can hit it. 75% of the time, they don't.
Yeah that could be it. Will give it a go, have always struggled doing that but hopefully it works.Still watching the ball instead of the bat?
From what I've been told by the slippers I've played with, at second and beyond you have to watch the batsman, because of the greater angle; whilst at first you can watch the ball from the bowler's hand.