Tagged with leg spinning

Unkie J talks leggies

A small boy entered the Pizza shop today and said

“Hey Unkie J, I want to be a leg spinner just like you”.

And I said

“Well I am hybrid Bubby/club legspinner”.

The little boy ran out confused.

That left me worried about the state of education in our schools.

Are kiddies not taught about the variants of leg spinning.

Maybe some on my blog are confused also.

Leg Spinning types and brief descriptions, by Unkie J.

The Aussie ripper leg spinner

Practised by Peter McIntyre, Sutart MacGill, and Shane Warne.

The main art of this leg spinner is the actual side spin imparted on the ball, which is done with a slightly rounder arm action and wrists made of steel. The objective is to spin the ball sideways on glass whilst maintaining a fairly consistent length and line. In a lesser hands it can go horribly wrong, in the hands of a master, can be combined with subtler straighter balls and gentle over spin to keep the batsman guessing. Mostly a leg stump line, can be less effective against a cack hander.

Signature move, the ball the spins past the outside edge.

The Bubbly Pakistani leg spinner

Practised by Mushtaq Ahmed and Abdul Qadir.

This is legspin with a touch of aerobics. It requires lots of hopping, arm whipping and an offstump line. This is the one form of leg spin that best encapsulates everything there is about legspinning, as all delivery’s are available from a straighter arm action whilst still spinning the ball. The objective is to trick the batsmen with a variant of balls so devishly devised that he regulary plays for a ball that spins one way whilst it spins the other way. Because the ball spins both ways it is effective against all batsmen, but the offstump line means a good length is every important.

Signature move, the wrong’un that cuts the batsman in two halves.

The Absurdist straight breaker

Practised By Tiger Bill O’Reilly, Anil Kumble, Shahid Afridi, Chris Harris, Cameron White and Piyush Chawla.

This is leg spin without the legspin. It is deception of the highest order. It is also almost impossible to make a living on. You must have the ability to sell the spin, whilst delivering the straight one. You can bowl any delivery you want with this style, but it doesn’t really matter, because you won’t be spinning the ball anyway, but if you are good at it, you will be aggressively accurate and steady like a train. The objective is to penetrate the mind of the batsmen through repetition and absurdity.

Signature move, the straight one.

The club leg spinner

Practised by Richie Benaud, Bryce McGain, & every West Indian Legspinner ever.

Not a huge spinner of the ball, has variation but mostly works on the fact that if they can land every leg spinner in the same place for a day wickets will come. The arm action is usually somewhere between straight arm and round arm, and this particular style comes in many wonderfully different actions. The objective is to beat you with subtle flight, spin and speed changes.

Signature move, the batsman losing patience and swinging across the line, but hitting it straight up in the air.

The Paul Adams leg spinner

Practised by Paul Adams, and me in the backyard, until I hurt my back.

Was once described as a frog in a blender. I like to think of it as a midget, wearing a bunny suit, trying to fling its head at you with a shoulder jerk so savage that it could kill the average ostrich. The objective seems to be not to fling your head at the batsman, but to make him think you are while you get him with your badly disguised wrong one.

Signature move, unknown.

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(leg) spinners are cool

Episode 4 (leg) spinners are cool

What is great about spinners can all be seen with Cricket with balls own Bryce McCain.

The dude is a single father.

He works at a bank.

He wears glasses.

He’s older than Johnny Cash.

Some of you may think he’s a bit of a nerd.

If you think that, you’re wrong, and a little mean. Stereotyping is so last century.

The man is a leg spinner, that’s like crickets version of method acting, everyone wants to do it, but very few can.

Leg Spinning is the coolest of the dark arts.

In fact, leg spinning is the coolest thing you can do with your pants on (naked leg spinning is pretty cool as well).

Me, I’m also a nerd, not as much as Bryce, but a nerd nonetheless. I spend all day looking up information on film directors, I run two blogs, I have more Internet alias than an undercover CIA agent, and I make films where dolls fight gnomes.

The one redeeming quality I have is my ability to bowl wrong uns and sliders. That’s it, but the ladies love it. Trust me, when it comes out the back of my hand, they swoon.

Why do you think Our Bryce might be playing for Australia in 3 weeks, cause he’s cool.

Shane Warne coolest bogan alive.

Richie Beanaud, coolest old man alive.

Anil Kumble coolest dude who once had a moustache and who isn’t Burt.

Mushtaq Ahmed coolest short and chubby dude alive.

Tiger Bill O’Reilly, coolest dead man alive.

So if your having trouble with the ladies, take a page out of Our Bryce McGain’s book, improve the wrist action, follow through and remember, the ladies love variety.

Oh and happy one year anniversary AYALAC. Keep up the good work, the world needs you.

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Our Ray Bright

I was born into a cricketing family. I played my first game of cricket at 7.

I didn’t bat or bowl in that game, they were scared I’d get hurt, as it was under 12’s.

The next year I started batting and bowling. I started with a golden duck and a wicket in my first over.

By the time I was 9 my father had decided that since I was only average at wicket keeping and bowled slower than any other kid my age he’d make me into a spin bowler.

My father had been in love with leg spinners all his life (which is odd for a quick bowler who grew up in the 60’s), and I actually started as an off spinner, until I realised you could do more tricks as a leg spinner.

He was forever going on about these hacks that no one had ever heard of Peter Sleep, Terry Jenner, Ray Bright, Trevor Hohns and Ashley Mallet.

I took to it straight away, I could deceive batsmen after walking in, brilliant. It was if spin bowling was designed with me in mind, I get to walk in throw the ball up and laugh when people miss it, that’s my kind of caper.

My leg spinning got better and better, I had a handy wrong’un, great flight and an awesome top spinner (also when I was 14 I had a surprisingly accurate bouncer)

When I got to fifteen I got picked by North Melbourne for the Dowling shield (same year as Michael Klinger) and even though they hardly bowled me (1-1-1-0 I shit you not), my dad was excited enough to tell me he’d pay for spin bowling lessons.

So I rang a number in some cricket magazine that advertised spin bowling lessons. The phone was answered by a dude in a factory office (I think), eventually I was passed to a guy named Ray Bright.

I shat myself.

He asked what kind of spinner I was, leg, asked about my run up, I told him it was like Mushtaq Ahmed’s, he asked about my line, I told him middle to off, he asked about my wrong un, I said I had one, he asked about my flipper, I said no. He asked if I spun the ball a lot, I said not really use variation and flight mostly.

He said ok, I think we can work with this, first we need to slow your run up down, make it a brisk walk, then we need to get you bowling at leg or outside, we need to you to spin the ball more, we need you to forget about the wrong un and learn the flipper.

I said, won’t that make me exactly like Warne.

He said, yeah that’s what I’m trying to do.

Oh, but I don’t bowl like warne, I bowl like mushtaq ahmed.

But warne is better.

I can’t spin the ball a long way. I don’t have strong wrists or big hands.

That doesn’t matter, we teach you ways to be like him.

I don’t want to be like Warne, I want to be like Qadir or Ahmed.

They are both good bowlers, but warne is better. So when can I book you in.

I told him I’d have to see when my dad could take me. I never did call him back. He was nice though.

That is one of about 25 stories I have about growing up as a leg spinner under Shane Warne. I was 11 and had just got good when he played his first test.

One day I will tell you all the stupid things I was told by coaches, captains, teammates and selectors on my long trip to the middle.

Ray Bright 25 tests, 53 wickets, avg 41, best bowling 7/87.

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