Bowling Styles
There are two basic approaches to bowling: fast and spin. A fast bowler
bowls the ball as fast as practicable, attempting to defeat the batsman with its
pace. If the ball also swings in the air, or
seams (moves sideways) off
the pitch because of bouncing on the seam, it can be very difficult to play. A
spin bowler has a more ambling run-up and uses wrist or finger motion to impart
a spin to the ball. The ball then spins to one side when it bounces on the
pitch, thus also hopefully causing it to be hard to hit. Fast bowlers are
generally used with a new ball, while spin bowlers get more spin with a worn
ball. There is also medium pace bowling, which concentrates more on swing and
seam than pace.
A swing bowler will hold the seam of the ball at a certain angle and attempt to
release the ball so that it spins with the seam at a constant angle. With one
side of the ball polished and the other rough, differential air pressure will
cause it to swing in the air.
A seam bowler attempts to keep the seam vertical, so that the ball hits the seam
when it bounces on the pitch and deflects in its path either to the right or
left.
A fast bowler can also pull his fingers down one side of the ball as he lets it
go, imparting a small amount of sideways spin to the ball. This can cause the
ball to move sideways off the pitch. Such a delivery is called a
leg-cutter
if the ball moves from the leg side to the off side of a right-handed
batsman, or an
off-cutter if moves from the off to the leg. A specialist
spin bowler can get a lot more spin that a fast bowler bowling cutters, however.
There are two types of spin bowling:
off-spin, and
leg-spin.
Imagine holding a ball in your right hand and, for simplicity's sake, throwing
it. If you twist your hand in a clockwise direction on release, then the spin on
the ball will be such that when it bounces it will spin to your right. This is
essentially off-spin bowling (so called because, to a right-handed batsman, the
ball spins
from the off side to the leg side). The off-spin delivery
itself is called either an
off-spinner or an
off-break. An
off-spin bowler will sometimes not spin the ball so much, putting more pace on
the delivery. Such a delivery is called an
arm-ball.
Now imagine twisting the ball anticlockwise and releasing it from the palm so
that it 'rolls' over the base of the little finger. This gives the ball spin in
the opposite direction, so it spins left when it bounces. This is basic leg-spin
(because to a right-handed batsman it spins from leg to off). The basic leg-spin
delivery is called a
leg-spinner or
leg-break.
The interesting thing about leg-spin is that if you cock your wrist at various
angles you can in fact, with the same basic bowling action, produce spin in
different directions. With the wrist cocked a little towards the inside of the
arm, you can produce
top-spinners. Go further and you actually end up
producing spin in the same direction as an off-spinner. A ball bowled in this
way by a leg-spin bowler is called a
wrong 'un, or sometimes a
googly
. Probably trickiest of all is a ball bowled with the hand in the same
position as a top-spinner, but released from
under the hand, thereby
gaining back-spin. This ball is called a
flipper.
(Mike Whitaker tells me that a flipper is actually bowled from the back of the
hand like a normal leg-spinner, but with the forearm twisted outwards, so the
ball spins about a vertical axis. I'm not sure which of these is correct, so I'm
mentioning both here!)
Mike has also kindly supplied a graphic which attempts to show the arm and
wrist action of the different leg-spin deliveries. Sorry for those with only
ASCII browsers, but this is too difficult to show in ASCII! For those of you
with graphical browsers, the following diagram shows a view of a
(right-handed) leg-spinner's arm, from in front (i.e., batsman's point of
view). The rotation of the ball out of the hand is the same in each case, with
the ball spinning with the seam as an "equator".
So right handed spinners fall into two classes: off-spinners, with their simple
off-spin and arm-ball deliveries; and leg-spinners, with their leg-spinners,
top-spinners, wrong 'uns, and flippers. Leg-spinners are naturally much more
difficult to bat against, because of the great variety of balls they can
produce, but they are actually rarer than off-spinners because it is so much
more difficult to bowl reasonably accurately with the leg-spin hand action.
For left-handed spin bowlers there is a whole different system of nomenclature!
A left-handed bowler who uses the same action as an off-spinner is called an
orthodox spinner. Such bowlers are not uncommon. A left-hander who bowls
with the same action as a leg-spinner is called an
unorthodox spinner - and these are the rarest bowlers in cricket. The
left-handed analogue of the leg-spin delivery (which spins the opposite way, of
course) is called an unorthodox spinner. The top-spinner and flipper retain
their names. And the left-handed analogue of the wrong 'un is called a
Chinaman
.
Typical bowling speeds are:
- Fast bowler:
- 130-140 km/h (80-90 mph)
- Medium pace bowler:
- 100-130 km/h (60-80 mph)
- Spin bowler:
- 70-90 km/h (45-55 mph)
Bowlers also make use of the state of the pitch, which is quite crucial to
the game, and is one of the things the commentators look at in great detail
before the game begins. Because it's a natural surface, there are usually small
inconsistencies in its flatness, hardness and elasticity. Over a multi-day game,
or even over a single day, these become more pronounced, so it often gets more
difficult to bat as the game progresses. Spin bowlers in particular often find
that they get much more spin from an old pitch than a freshly prepared one.
Some of the different types of balls bowled have special names:
- Bouncer:
- A ball bounced short so that it bounces high, usually chest height or
higher as it passes the batsman.
- Yorker:
- A ball bounced very close to the batsman's crease. This is difficult to
score from and often gets batsmen out, but is difficult to bowl without
accidentally bowling a full toss.