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Aussie cricket great slams national batting coach after poor showing in West Indies during first Test - 'need to create sound techniques'
Aussie cricket great slams national batting coach after poor showing in West Indies during first Test - 'need to create sound techniques'

Daily Mail​

time7 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Daily Mail​

Aussie cricket great slams national batting coach after poor showing in West Indies during first Test - 'need to create sound techniques'

Australian cricket great Ian Healy has torched national batting coach Michael Di Venuto, adamant the top six has 'regressed' under his tutelage at Test level. The West Indies' seam bowlers exposed the likes of Sam Konstas, Cameron Green and Josh Inglis in Barbados, with the Aussies having to lean on decorated pace trio Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazelwood to avoid a potential shock defeat at Kensington Oval. It follows underwhelming scores of 212 and 207 in the World Test Championship final defeat at the hands of South Africa earlier this month at Lord's. Australia dropped Marnus Labuschagne for Konstas, but the teenager has looked out of his depth at the crease. Healy stressed he doesn't like to 'put the pump on coaches', but firmly believes the Aussies have gone backwards with the bat under Di Venuto. 'I love to put it back onto the players more than coaches usually,' Healy said on SEN. 'But, as I said, Australian cricket's batting head coach - and every state batting coach - should be under pressure because there's not enough runs being scored around the nation either. 'Michael Di Venuto – a friend of mine who is a good coach and a good man – has held the job since mid-2021. 'In this time, our national team batting has regressed in performance at Test level. 'All that's important to me is the performance. 'I don't care how you do it or what will make it easier for you – just get it done.' Healy added the Aussie Test stars look nervous and are not backing their techniques. The scrappy performances leave fans understandably nervous ahead of the Ashes this summer. 'They're not making it easy for themselves at all, players have got to deal better with nerves by the sound of it,' Healy said. 'They need to create sound techniques and bat with balance so you can make really sound decisions ball after ball for long periods. 'At the moment, we're failing many of these points, and the lower order is having to deal with it - either recovering the score or losing. 'It's just too hard at the moment, we've got to clear those minds of our top order.' Healy has been outspoken in recent days, but was left red-faced after launching an astonishing attack on West Indies paceman Shamar Joseph, declaring the raw quick 'isn't Curtly Ambrose.'

Australian great Ian Healy questions impact of batting coach Michael Di Venuto
Australian great Ian Healy questions impact of batting coach Michael Di Venuto

News.com.au

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • News.com.au

Australian great Ian Healy questions impact of batting coach Michael Di Venuto

Australian cricket great Ian Healy has taken aim at national batting coach Michael Di Venuto, claiming the top six has 'regressed' under his tutelage. The West Indies made light work of the Aussie top order again on Thursday, reducing the tourists to 4-93 after bowling them out for 180 on day one. It follows scores of 212 and 207 in the World Test Championship final defeat to South Africa earlier this month. Australia dropped the out-of-form Marnus Labuschagne for Sam Konstas, but the teenager has scratched out just eight runs across two innings. Healy doesn't like to 'put the pump on coaches' but says the Aussies have gone backwards with the bat under Di Venuto. 'I love to put it back onto the players more than coaches usually,' Healy said on SENQ Breakfast. 'But, as I said, Australian cricket's batting head coach and every state batting coach (should be under pressure) because there's not enough runs being scored around the nation either. 'Michael Di Venuto – a friend of mine who is a good coach and a good man – has held the job since mid-2021. 'In this time, our national team batting has regressed in performance at Test level, that's all that's important to me, the performance. 'I don't care how you do it or what will make it easier for you – just get it done.' Konstas in particular has made a jumpy return to Test cricket. He was dropped twice in the opening over of the second innings before defaulting to his aggressive stride down the wicket approach. Healy says the Aussies' look nervous and have seemingly little trust in their technique. 'They're not making it easy for themselves at all, players have got to deal better with nerves by the sound of it,' Healy said. 'They need to create sound techniques and bat with balance so you can make really sound decisions ball after ball for long periods. 'At the moment, we're failing many of these points, and the lower order is having to deal with it either recovering the score or losing. 'It's just too hard at the moment, we've got to clear those minds of our top order.'

One run, eight ducks, total carnage: Richmond's horror show
One run, eight ducks, total carnage: Richmond's horror show

CNA

time26-05-2025

  • Sport
  • CNA

One run, eight ducks, total carnage: Richmond's horror show

LONDON :In what may rank among cricket's most spectacular batting calamities, Richmond's fourth XI were dismissed for a grand total of two runs on Saturday – only one of which they actually scored themselves. Chasing a mountainous target of 427, Richmond's hapless batsmen lasted a mere 5.4 overs before their innings concluded in what statisticians might generously describe as a collapse. North London Cricket Club had earlier pummelled Richmond's bowling attack to all corners of the ground in the Middlesex County League fixture, amassing a mammoth 426-6 from their allotted 45 overs after Richmond won the toss. What followed was cricketing carnage of the highest order. Eight of Richmond's ten batsmen trudged back to the pavilion without troubling the scorers, each dismissed for a duck. The scorecard showed just one solitary run from the bat, with the other coming courtesy of a wide delivery. The performance brings to mind the old cricket adage that batting is meant to be an occupation, not a visitation. "A lot of context but still not a result that we are proud of! Our 2's, 3's and 5's all won though," Richmond posted on social media platform X, attempting to salvage some pride from a weekend otherwise remembered for arithmetic rarely seen on cricket scoresheets.

The Art of Batting by Jarrod Kimber: The Ins and Outs of Cricket's greatest batsmen
The Art of Batting by Jarrod Kimber: The Ins and Outs of Cricket's greatest batsmen

Daily Mail​

time19-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Daily Mail​

The Art of Batting by Jarrod Kimber: The Ins and Outs of Cricket's greatest batsmen

The Art Of Batting by Jarrod Kimber (Bloomsbury Sport £20, 288pp) Did you know that manure changed cricket? Before the late 19th century, muck spreading was done by hand, meaning little chunks of the stuff would lurk on the pitch. If a ball hit one it would bounce unpredictably, thereby confusing the batsman. Once dung began to be liquefied and spread by machine, pitches became more reliable. This is the detail in which cricket revels. Football is simple: you have to kick the ball into their net more times than they kick it into yours. Cricket is complex and so those who play the game often exhibit a certain kind of… let's call it 'intensity'. Jarrod Kimber's book provides ample evidence of just how strange cricketers can be. John Wright of New Zealand was so happy with one innings that he glued his gloves to the bat handle, so he could replicate his grip precisely the next time he played. Meanwhile India 's Ranji (Colonel H.H. Shri Sir Ranjitsinhji Vibhaji, Jam Sahib of Nawanagar to you) was so scared of the ball as a youngster that his coach tied his right leg to the ground. Chance can play a part – Viv Richards developed his legendary love of hitting to the leg side because the off side of his school ground bordered land owned by someone who wouldn't throw the ball back. But you need to have natural talent in the first place. Experiments conducted indoors have shown that, unlike amateurs, professional batters can still hit the ball even when the lights are turned out. Very few of the so-called 'rules' of batting seem to apply universally. The greatest of all time, Don Bradman, had eyesight rated as 'poor' when he was in the army. You're always told to get your foot to the pitch of the ball, but Kevin Pietersen says he never bothered about that. And Kimber himself admits that on first seeing Steve Smith, 'I compared his chances of success to those of a dead donkey.' The Aussie now appears in sixth place on the list of all-time greats that concludes the book. David 'Bumble' Lloyd, as he discussed facing fast bowling, said: 'The thrill of the game is I know I can get hurt.' In 1953 New Zealand's Bert Sutcliffe was hit by a bouncer and had to visit hospital. On his return he carried on batting, and 'went through so many bandages that they had to try towels to stop the bleeding'. Mark Butcher remembers England's 1998 tour of the West Indies – local fans would line the road making cut-throat signals. His team-mate Alec Stewart 'played forward to a ball that almost displaced his nipple'. You'll need to be a confirmed cricket fan to enjoy (or even understand) this book. You can't make the arguments Kimber is looking to make without using statistics, but it does lead to a prose style that's more clubbing Matthew Hayden than elegant David Gower. That said, a good statistic is always a winner. I love the fact that the record for highest percentage of a side's runs in a completed Test innings happened in the first innings ever, in 1877, when Charles Bannerman scored 165 of Australia's 245 runs.

County Championship, Yorkshire lead over Essex passes 300, day three - radio & text
County Championship, Yorkshire lead over Essex passes 300, day three - radio & text

BBC News

time11-05-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

County Championship, Yorkshire lead over Essex passes 300, day three - radio & text

'Yorkshire batting very well' Essex 123 v Yorks 216 & 219-1 Jonathan Doidge BBC Radio Leeds cricket commentator Yorkshire have been batting very well but it has to be said that some of the bowling has not been at the highest order. Adam Lyth really has put the pedal to the metal since he got to that 100 mark. Incidentally, there are just two counties now that Adam Lyth is yet to score a first-class century against - Worcestershire and Derbyshire.

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