Thank you.
And another question. Do you know any Both-handed Batsman? (Batsman who changes right-handed and left-handed in accordance to Bowler)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esOry38d4H4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPWPN27JXM8
As you can see, it has been attempted several times. Many batsmen began playing it in ODI cricket, and even more so since T20 became established.
The problem with a batsman switching hands properly, and not mid-shot, is that cricket batting is extremely difficult compared to baseball hitting. In baseball you are basically swinging the bat through one arc - in cricket you have a very wide range of shots. Your foot movement is also a lot more important. It's very, very difficult to be a competent batsmen with both hands.
Also, the way the rules of cricket works, if you take your stance as a right hander when the bowler runs in, the wide lines will be enforced as such. Therefore if you switch hands as the bowler runs in, and the bowler now bowls to your new off-side (which, as a right hander, would have been your leg-side), and you just let the ball go without trying to hit it, it is called a wide, since you started batting as a right hander and that ball would be considered wide to a right hander, regardless of how your feet and bat are positioned now. Atleast, that is my understanding of the rule.
Therefore, by changing stance after the ball has been bowled, you can be assured that the ball will land in a certain hitting zone - in this case around about the left-handers legstump. Thus you only really need to master hitting the ball through the legside, and not worry about the offside.
Instead, if you attempt to learn how to take your stance as a lefty against some bowlers and righty against others, you will need to develop an all-round game on both sides of the wicket for both hands, and that is just too difficult. You might get some batsmen who can do it at lower levels, but it's highly unlikely at international level.
Same with bowling. It's such a complex action, learning how to bowl accurately and with good speed/spin/movement with both hands is near impossible.