The last game of the season saw West complete a thumping win to finish third in the division, narrowly missing out on promotion.

So, let's review the season, so we can start planning for next summers promotion push.

First, the final game. Batting first in glorious conditions - perhaps the best of the year - we started well. Our overseas player moved up to open while the skipper dropped down. This change worked as the pair put on 71 in 17 overs (4.17 per over). One opener dug in, the other looked to play with more expanse and got plenty of poor balls to exploit.

However, West did not use this good start, with a phase that saw a couple of attacking batsmen fall cheaply (a run out and caught on the boundary), while our overseas opener was stumped for 77 when he could have easily sailed to a hundred. This 23 over phase saw the rate drop to 3.65, when fives were quite possible against a weak fielding side with a fast outfield and easy pitch.

The slowest section was when two batsmen got together who do not have natural boundary hitting games. They tried and failed to hit gaps and rotate. The worst part was an eight over section where just 11 runs were scored. It was possibly a tactical error to put a slow starter in at the 30 over mark, especially when the guy at the other end was going slow too.

In response, a big hitting batsmen was sent in and he went for it, scoring 15 in eight balls. The changed the tone of the innings and the last few batsmen clocked on that driving hard and straight was easy runs. The last 10 overs yielded 72 runs, and West finished on 228.

I felt this was about right (we predicted 220 at the start) but in hindsight, another 30 runs were on the table. Had the middle section been more productive we could have passed 250. 

Control above the magic 77.7% line and was and combined with misfields galore.

Nonetheless, none of these details mattered as St Michael's collapsed utterly after their main batsman made 33 of the first 37 runs before nicking off.

The other 10 batsman managed 27 between them and they were all out with little fight for 60. A hat trick for our first change seamer was probably the highlight. It was a solid performance from us both bowling and fielding but really it was a terrible performance with the bat from a clearly under-strength opposition. I was glad West kept the foot on the gas to make the game a short one. One risk from these dead games is to struggle to get motivated, but there was no danger in this game.

The win made no difference to the league table and West finished third. 

Season review

So what have we learned this year?

A lot!

We have a strong squad who's strength is clearly bowling, but have shown signs of improvement with the bat. The fielding has also stepped up.

Batting

With the bat, consistency of control (BC) has been excellent, even though scoring rates and runs scored have varied. 

As a team, you can see how both consistency of BC and how scores are loosely tied to both BC and SB% from this chart:

Comparison of runs scored with SB% and BC. As you can see, the lines loosely follow each other.

Comparison of runs scored with SB% and BC. As you can see, the lines loosely follow each other.

When scores drop, BC and SB% also tend to drop. For example, here are the average scores for each SB%

  • Below 32% - 152 (77.59% BC)
  • Above 32% - 178 (78.59% BC)

So, the trend is clear: The more balls you score from and the fewer balls you miss, the more you score. But you must bear in mind that there are plenty of examples of the trend bucked. It's never a sure thing.

Interestingly, the average number of balls that result in a boundary stay the same (13) at every SB%, but the average number of singles almost doubles from 34 to 61. 

The lesson to me here is simple; increasing SB% is about scoring more singles, rather than blazing more boundaries

Individually, the runs have been split evenly through the team. No one excelled, all batsmen had at least one good performance and the lower order all did good jobs. 

Only one batsman passed 400 runs but six passed 200 and nine scored over 100. 

The top seven scored 79% of the runs at an average of 18 runs each and SB% 31%. 

As a team, this approach worked well enough for us, but did make for some shaky moments in individual games when wickets fell. Realistically, another 30 or so runs per match is the key if we are to be promoted next year. My thought is this can be achieved by the top order boosting SB% by 1% (and therefore averages by 5 runs).

Not a tall order and a good target!

We have a generally attack-minded top order (I'd say five of next season's top six are guys who like to get on with it) so this should be an easy sell.

Stats aside, our batting was superior than the opposition in most matches with two notable exceptions. We batted first and scored below par in both these matches and the stronger opposition batting were too much for our usual excellent bowlers. I'm wondering if there is an issue when pressure is on. That thought needs time to dwell.

To drill down on runs further, we can also look at scoring rates within games and between games. Starting with the latter:

Average RpO over the 2016 season

Average RpO over the 2016 season

As you can see, West started reasonably, getting the average RpO over 4 quickly, peaking at 4.27 in June. However, July and August saw the average fall consistently back down below 4, only rallying at the last game. This is a time when rates should climb.

So why the dipping scores?

For me it is down to individual batsmen not firing well: For example, one batsman scored 245 runs up to the end of July and 47 after. Another scored 280 in the same early period before tailing off to 62 in his last seven games. Our overseas player scored half as many runs in the second half as the first.

No one else in the top seven filled in these games with the same effect: The average top seven batsman scored 20 runs a game in the first half and 13 in the second half (and that drops to 11 when you take out the final match).

The average score for number eight to 11 also dropped in the second half of the season, but by less than one run. So it's all about the top order.

Why did this happen? 

My current theory is training drop off, as I feel we didn't train as well or as hard with the bat as a unit as the season progressed. However, as I have no way of measuring this, it's hard to know for sure. Nevertheless, I will see if I can make changes next season.

What about run rates within games?

As you would expect, scores climb in each 10 over phase of the match as you see here:

Average Runs scored by West in each 10 over phase

Average Runs scored by West in each 10 over phase

So the template is to tick along for 20 overs, gradually increasing the rate from 2.9 to 3.3. The middle overs consolidate at 4s before the long handle in the final 10 overs. Sensible stuff.

Outside the last 10 (where there was not enough data to make a sensible decision), each phase has a different influence on the final score:

  • Above average 0-10 score makes the average total 182. (Below average is 124.)
  • Above average 10-20 score makes the average total 152. 
  • Above average 20-30 score makes the average total 164.
  • Above average 30-40 score makes the average total 206. (Below average is 176.)

From this you can the most important time to improve the rate is in the first 10 overs and - even more so - overs 30-40.

For next season, I will hope to boost these scores to at least 35 runs in the first 10, and 50 runs in the pre-death phase. That's only an extra 14 runs in 120 balls. Shouldn't be too tricky, especially as we have done it this season several times.

You might say target is influenced by wickets. So let's look at that now.  

A good start makes a difference. When two or more wickets fall in the first 10 the score averages to 136. It's 169 with fewer wickets.

Losing wickets between overs 30-40 makes no discernible difference to the score, neither does losing wickets in the last 10. 

That said, you need five wickets in hand at over 30 to be confident of making it to a good total, and certainly no fewer than three.

It seems clear to me that we are at our best with the bat when scoring at 3s in the first 10, maintaining the good start without losing more than five wickets up to 30 overs,  accelerating to 5s after that and going big at the end. 

Thrive with intent!

Certainly this tactic should work both chasing and setting a target. The only difference is not to restrict yourself in the first innings if you think you can go past the average target.

Speaking of chasing, West won 71% of chases and 75% batting first.

The average chase was 129, which we got four down. However, we also lost our two biggest chases with our best chase just 162. These two fact contributed to the general feeling we are not good at chasing. I disagree that losing four wickets chasing 129 is not good. It's simply using your resources. It could be better, but it's not even close to losing. We won two from four games when losing more than four wickets, so even when we wobble we are still in with a good chance of winning. 

However, not being able to chase 215 and 300 (the two losses) is a concern. Perhaps we need to work on batting under pressure towards a big target.

When setting a target, there is no pattern to the losses. We lost after scoring 239 and 189 but won after scoring 85 and 118. Naturally the ideal is to average more than 164 batting first, but with our bowling it was not needed very often (and the plan next year is to score 20-30 more batting first as previously outlined).

So, let's move on to bowling now.

Bowling

The bowling was exceptional this year, consistently bowling out teams all year for low scores.

Five bowlers did the bulk of the work. Two spinners took 72 wickets between them at less than 13 runs a wicket. Three seamers took 77 wickets at under 14 (under 15 is excellent work). That alone tells you all you need to know.

The plan was consistently executed: Take early wickets with seam then bring on the spinners to remove the rest. This was true batting first or second.

On average, the opposition were four down after 20 overs and all out in 39 overs. It was 36 when we bowled second. 

One main seamer took most of his wickets up top. His contribution of 22 wickets at 9.86 in this phase is easily the most valuable because it was often the best batsmen. He opened with a seamer who also got 12 wickets at 13.67 in this phase.

The main spinner took 32 of his 41 wickets in the middle overs. He was not far ahead of the other spinner, who took 28 wickets in this phase. However, the first spinner was also pretty good at bowling in the last 10 overs too, and nabbed a few wickets from tail-enders. The third seamer bowled most in the middle, taking 19 wickets at 10.11. 

Impressive from everyone in these roles.

As a crude measure of bowling accuracy, I also compared wides through the season. West bowl three fewer on average, and bowled fewer wides in 13 from 19 matches.

Incidentally, wides is another broad indicator of success. When West "won" wides we won 84% of games. When we "lost" wides (bowled more) we won 50%. Turns out bowling straighter and giving the opposition fewer runs is helpful!

In the games that went the distance, we were less successful. Death bowling saw us average three wickets and concede 62 runs (compared to our own death performance of four wickets and 57 runs). West lost two of these three games.

The back up bowlers were all good. The main one was a batsman who could bowl a bit. He played every game but only bowled a few overs. From outside the main eleven, one leg spinner, one off spinner and one seamer had a game when someone was out. No one failed to do a solid job. One other seamer was brought in as a "horse for courses" choice to open the bowling early season. It didn't quite work out but he still took a couple of wickets. Overall all, they were not needed much, only bowling an average of 7 overs.

All that aside, the real secret of success is no secret: early wickets starting a cascade that almost always ends before 50 overs.

The tricky part for next year will be finding something to try and develop!

Fielding

Finally, the tricky one.

Fielding has always been unmeasured, so this year we tried to put some simple numbers on fielding skills:

  1. Catches and drops
  2. Good stops and misfields
  3. Throws at the stumps

What we found was interesting.

We were pretty happy with catching through the year but still only caught 57%. While this included half-chances it's still lower than you would hope. More of a worry was that this number didn't change much through the year. I would hope for it to go up, but it remained around mid fifties percent the whole time.

As catching practice volume was high, it's time to look in more detail at why so many were dropped. Sadly we didn't record any more than catches and drops so I can't see any trends for types of drop. 

My instinct is to say we need to make catching practice both harder and more specific with more flat and low catches. We also need to make sure fielders are protected from weaker areas. So, if you are poor under the high ball, stay off the rope as much as possible.

Also, we are better catching at home than away. I put that down background. The ball can be picked out easier in familiar surroundings.

Stops and misfields were better. We averaged out four misfields per game and six good stops. Misfields dropped from six earlier in the season. And was my secret aim for the second half of the year. Anything under five seems to be acceptable to the players. Good stops fluctuated a bit but always between five and seven. We will continue to work hard on ground work, perhaps looking at diving as a next step.

Throwing at the stumps was poor. We hit 21% (24% at home) and didn't get enough run outs. This fluctuated hugely through the year but the average fell from 60% after six games to 8% in six matches at the end. We seem to get worse in the second half!

Without detailed analysis of what was going wrong, I can only say we need better practice to get the numbers up. We always practice a few throws but I can't say we do it with full commitment, at different angles or with work on technique. So, a winter mission might be to develop throwing accuracy through a technical programme. I'm still to work that out.  

So, overall a superb season for the first team, with still key areas to develop further: consistency with the bat, strike rotation, bowling accuracy, catching and throwing.

Mainly thanks to winning, the spirit of the club has also been much higher this year. The first team are tightly knit, good mates and led by a couple of social butterflies who were not around last year. The rest of the club share in the success of every team and I see no signs of cliques of favouritism.

Other teams

Obviously my focus has been on the first team mainly this year. However there are many other teams at the club!

The strong 2nd XI won their division. It was perhaps slightly tighter than we would hope, but the side is filled with experienced guys and is well-captained. There is a core of guys who all stepped up to fill in the first team with no problem.

The challenge for this team in the next year is to continue to bring through players who can step up to the first team. Clearly, young cricketers are the priority here and we have a few who can fit 2nd team cricket around school and University. 

The Development team, playing on Sunday, is even more focused on young players. It was my aim to almost turn the side into a Youth 1st XI, and we are well on the way to that, often fielding five or more under 23s. We also fielded one 12 year old and two 13 year old boys this year, all who were not out of their depth. Also, first team players have turned out to help out youngsters. Brilliant. 

However, we also have a core of less "serious" guys who don't train much and are not on contention for regular Saturday cricket. These are important club players and great lads to a man, but they don't fit the Development model too well. I have been trying to encourage them to play for the midweek 3rd XI over the Dev team. That said, a member is a member and we are an inclusive club. Sometimes youngsters play midweek over Sunday and sometimes less serious guys play Sunday over midweek.

I've been clear about my general policy of preferring youth on Sunday and no one seems to mind too much as long as everyone gets a game somewhere. 

I also never write off anyone keen to play cricket as I believe we can all improve given enough work and time.

We fielded six age group teams this year. That was probably too many with the experiment of adding U14 and U16 to an already packed schedule. The strongest team was the U13 boys, with the U15s also having a good showing. The U18 were weak purely due to numbers.

The long serving Junior Convenor has finally throw in the towel and retired this season. This is sad as he has been an incredible servant. It does give us a chance to look at the setup.

I feel there are too many age groups at the moment and hope we can pair this down, ideally with eight a side cricket for the younger boys. 

I also want to look at the training of 12-15 year old lads. 11 and under are served by Monday sessions, 15 and up and join in senior training, but the in between ages are playing on Monday in the summer and also need practice the most as they are learning to play hard ball. The simple solution may be to have an older junior session before one of the senior practices next summer. 

And so that is the 2016 done and dusted.

Personally it's been fun, and challenging. I have learned a lot and felt I have been part of a far more positive environment than any other season I can remember. We have our focus areas for the winter and are moving forward to 2017 full of hope for another step forward!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe

The last few weeks have been a roller coaster for the players, and the coach! Here's a summary from on field performances and training thoughts.

 

The last four games have been a win, a win (over top of table rivals), a loss (against the other rivals) and abandoned without a ball bowled. This meant that we could have moved into second place for promotion after beating Poloc, but were scuppered by a weak performance against Greenock.

 

The chances of promotion are now zero.

 

As has been the case all season, the bowling has saved the batting repeatedly. Scores of 171 (against weak bowling), 132 and 102 batting first are not enough and the source of the issue has been no runs from the top order. Lucky for us, the bowling has won out mostly. It was telling that the day West didn't take enough wickets was the day we lost.

 

It's interesting that batting control has remained high all season and is still at 78% for the year. However, scoring ball percentage has dropped from 32% in the first part of the year to 28% in the last few games. As we average about 2 runs per shot played, that accounts for a drop of 24 runs  when batting first. It's 18 runs when adjusted for average balls faced.

 

Really, this should have gone up over the year as pitches improve and batsmen grow in confidence. It hasn't. Scoring off more balls and rotating the strike is an area to work on.

 

There has been an expectation that anything less than 250 batting first is a failure. However, realistically, this does not happen; even at the top level. Premier teams with better batsmen and more reliable pitches only manage an average of just over 200. West average 150 unadjusted for conditions. This is still not enough from the batting unit, but it's good to be realistic about what is achievable.

 

And this 150 has been enough to beat lesser teams when we bowl them out for, on average, 140. The bowlers - apart from the Greenock game - have plundered wickets with ease.

 

The fielding has remained strong. We save an average of six runs a match and catch about two in three chances. Combined with better running than most, we average nine runs a match better in "controllables" than the opposition.

 

What does this mean for West now?

 

With one game left, training will be winding down. I would like  to see guys take the chance to practice something they don't normally do, like strike rotation or power hitting. I suspect instead it will be a mixture of apathy and "having a hit". I'll push my agenda as much as possible though.

 

Then I'd like to have a review with senior players to work out what to do differently next year. It will be good to know both individual and team goals for the winter sessions so I can plan so appropriate work.

 

In my mind, this means better strike rotation and better confidence of top order batsmen to take scores on to forty plus. It also means furthering fielding skills to take even more catches, make even more good stops and - our biggest weakness in the field - hitting the stumps for run outs.

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe

West of Scotland 85. Weirs 55. West of Scotland win by 30 runs. 

 

What a strange, interesting and exciting season this has been so far. And this game, West's fifth win a row, was the strangest so far. The scores say most of it: Winning by 30 runs after scoring 85!

 

It was an away game at a ground notorious for low scores. No one was expecting great things. However, the warm up was focused. A few guys did seem a little off their game despite lots of enthusiasm. There were more dropped catches and misfields in the warm up than I have seen all year. I don't think we managed a single direct hit when warming up throws at the stumps. 

 

After losing the toss and being inserted, we were confident. The opposition looked weak. They had not warmed up at all and there were a few guys who looked pretty unfit. Yet the openers bowled accurately with seam movement and there were precious few chances to score runs. We ran well, making several singles. One opener decided to use his feet and make things happen, playing well a couple of times to score singles from length balls he had turned to half volley length. Despite some poor fielding, It was still slow going: 18-1 from nine overs. It looked like if they were going to get wickets it was more likely LBW and bowled than caught or run out. 

 

After 20 it was 55-4. This is low for West, but still only slightly behind the average of 62-3, and ahead of the slowest start (48-2). The best 20 is 77-2.

 

We thought there would be more bad balls and bad fielding to exploit. When that wasn't forthcoming, we lost focus and got out. Two mistimed shots to safe hands, one playing into the leg side and bowled off stump, two going back to full balls and trapped LBW, another LBW playing no shot. None of the top six were got out by magic balls.

 

The real failure was from overs 21-23, where we lost four wickets for five runs. Two were top six batsmen. This exposed the lower order early and two guys playing for the team for the first time this season went in quick succession to defensive shots.

 

Number seven knuckled down to bat with the last two. He scored 22 in 55 balls and farmed the strike away from the number 11 so well he only faced one ball in a stand lasting 19 runs. You might argue the 11 was not poor enough to be protected, but considering how well everyone else did, it was not a crazy decision from the better player to face as many balls as he could. He did turn down a few runs in the process, but that stand of 19 proved crucial. 

 

As as you would expect, control was the lowest of the year at 74.22%. Remember, the trend is to lose when control drops below 77.5%. 

 

However, at the break, the talk was not as depressing as you might imagine. 85 is a terrible score, but we have bowled out teams for less and knew they did not have much batting. We knew there was a chance, even with one bowler missing due to injury.

 

The scoring intially followed the same pattern: 20-2 after nine over but with Weirs having less control than West  (71.31%). The game was in the balance already. Then, in the last over before tea, a spinner came on and took a wicket to take Weirs into the break three down. West were back in the hunt.

 

After the tea break, only three bowlers were used. There were a few tense overs as Weirs moved to 37-3 in 12 overs. Then a wicket from the opening bowler was followed by a wicket maiden from our main spinner. It was 38-5 in 14 and the danger batsman was out. 

 

Nevertheless, 47 runs needed is very tight indeed, even with poor batsmen. The fifth wicket pair moved to 46-5 and every run seemed like a tiny cut that would eventually kill us. In fact, two wicket in two balls finished Weirs chances. 46-5 became 46-7. The last three got to 55-7 before collapsing. Five wickets had fallen for eight runs, with one run scored for three wickets in the last 15 balls.

 

Clearly, it was terrible batting, but the types of dismissal also tell a story: four catches behind the wicket (and two dropped at slip), three LBW and two bowled. Coupled with three wides bowled (two by a stand in seamer) you can see what a good bowling performance it was as well. 

 

So what are the lessons? 

 

First we can take confidence that we can win tight games. Yes, the opposition were very weak, but we gave them a chance to beat us with a weak batting performance yet still won with ease.  This is a marked difference from the Greenock game were we posted a defendable score and bowled poorly to lose.

 

Finally, when we get in a pickle, we need to learn how to manage the risks we take. The openers were right to look to rotate and increase the scoring rate. When it failed, two or three of middle order needed to dig in and be sure they were around to post a total. 160 was probably the upper end of what could have been scored, with 120 closer to the par. That requires top order guys to get 30 or more runs at a slow rate. The aim is still to bat with intent to score and thrive under the pressure of dot balls, but not to worry if you don't score for a few balls. The bad one will come. Patience.

 

This was an ugly win but a show of great character. I count it as progress from earlier in the year, but certainly not anywhere near the finished product. With two big ties to come, we have to lock our minds onto being at our best.

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
Hat trick ball

Hat trick ball

Irvine 75. West of Scotland 76-4. West win by six wickets.

With last week rained off, the aim was to get back to winning ways against Irvine, who beat West earlier in the season. This time there was no mistake. Irvine were terrible and West easily took them apart.

 

Conditions were bowler friendly. The ball both turned and seamed throughout the match. Irvine batted first and it was clear they were not the side we faced earlier in the season. One of the openers tried to play a forward defence to a bouncer, a batsman was rapped on the pad before his front foot had landed another could hardly put bat on ball. 16-3 from 10 overs.

 

The batting was so poor, all we had to do was put the ball in roughly the right area and watch wickets tumble. Only one player looked like he could score runs, and the tail was a shambling  combination of blockers and sloggers. Their number 11 looked like he had never played cricket before. He would not have got into our third team. That said, everyone bowled well. This team managed 215 against us earlier in the year so it wasn't a total shoe-in. West still needed to bowl well, and we did. There was almost a hat trick with two in two and the third ball running close.

 

There was precious little fielding skill needed as Irvine took no quick singles at all. West did drop a couple of catches and misfielded two so it wasn't perfect, but it was far better than the average for this year. 

 

The party was interrupted with Irvine having a couple of decent bowlers. A big hitter was promoted to opening: His mission was to win the game in short time as rain was about. I approved of this tactic as winning quickly is the sign of a strong team. Sadly, he was out first ball defending onto his ankle and the ball spinning back into the stumps. Ridiculous and freakish.

 

The other opener was sublime, looking like he would never get out and, with precious few boundaries available, looked to pick up quick single aplenty (16 in total). At the other end, our number three got a bad LBW (I know all batsmen think they get bad decisions, but even the umpire admitted a mistake on this one). Then number four seemed to get a good ball from the opening seamer and nicked off. We were three down in the first 10 overs. Every wicket was from a defensive shot, rather than a poorly played attacking stroke.

 

I was still not concerned. We were ahead of D/L and had plenty of batting to come. Even when we lost a fourth wicket, West only needed 30 or so runs to win. And this pair saw the game home in 26 overs. The rate was slower than I would have liked (2.89) but when you look at the difference in control (79% compared to 60%), I don't think we missed out on too many scoring opportunities, it was just difficult to bat even against average bowling.

 

Despite it being a comfortable chase in the end, it wasn't fully convincing. One player said he thinks we are not good at chasing. Looking at the stats, I disagree. When West bowl first, we have won five from seven, losing an average of six wickets per game. The average chase is 132 - a testament to the quality of our bowling and fielding - so getting there six down makes it seem like we are struggling, when actually we are doing the thing that matters; winning. 

 

Could we chase better? Of course. Our best chase was 162 and both losses came when the target was over 200. Are we doing well at it at the moment? Good enough to get the job done. It's a skill to develop for bigger challenges, but right now we are still going the right way.

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe

West of Scotland 118. Stirling 69. (32 overs rain reduced match). 

Despite forgettable batting, West showed mettle in the best bowling performance of the season so far.

 

Stiling are one of the sides in the better half of the division, so the game was set to be a challenge. In wet conditions, the game was reduced to 32 overs. Unlike last time, we handled the delay well. Most players had an impromptu game of football in the wet while we waited and I didn't hear one complaint. The warm up was focused. 

 

West batted first. The pitch was slow and the outfield was long and wet. We knew batting would be tough. It turned out to be the case as Stirling turned to seam and swing, taking three wickets in the first 10 overs. There was a recovery in the middle order and an acceleration from 2.2 an over. At one point West were motoring at 6.1 (between overs 18-24). 150 was quite possible with even 180 on the table.

 

Sadly, a poor decision from one player led to a run out and then getting bowled the next ball. From here, with only a few overs to go, the lower order struggled to pick up the pace. 87-3 became 110 all out with 28 runs scored in the last eight overs.  

 

Overall control was the lowest of the year at 75%, SB% was down at 28% (compared to 41% in the last rain reduced match an 31% on average) which tells a story of poor conditions. We managed 30 singles, 9 stolen (compared to 41/18 in the last reduced overs and 45/19 average). We hit seven boundaries. These stats was a consequence - in my mind - of tight bowling, ring fields, a big slow outfield and few gaps to hit. So, it poses an interesting tactical question on how we play in these conditions, when you have fewer balls you can score from and you can't hit the bad ones for many boundaries. The foundation is staying calm and keeping frustration out of your head, then building a method that allows you to break the shackles. We did this well in a couple of patches but still need to work on with individual methods.

 

Nevertheless, it was the bowling and fielding that won the day. West were simply better than Stirling. Four bowlers were used and all tied down the runs and took wickets easily. 23-2 from 12. 44-6 from 20. 69 all out. It as easily our best performance with the ball and those numbers tell you everything.

 

Catching was at 57% with the slips the culprits for the drops. It was made up in some good outfield catching and stopping. The fielding difference was -1 overall showing both sides did well. However, we bowled half the number of wides as Stirling.  Essentially, we out-bowled them. I was most pleased with the approach: no complaining, just positive and focused. We knew we had to bowl the, out and we did it by executing on the basics very well. 

 

Pleasingly, the seconds also won easily but are working hard to improve fielding standards too. The Development team also won playing on Sunday on the same wicket. Although a lower standard of cricket, the scores of 56 all out and 57-6 show you just how much the wicket favoured bowlers! 

 

 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe

St Michaels 91. West of Scotland 92-1. 

West are back on track with a stunning victory over a weaker side.  

 

At home, the conditions looked great for batting. St Michaels, who had a strong start to the year but have tailed away in recent weeks, decided to bat first. Sadly, their hopes were dashed with a combination of good opening bowling and poor batting. Our strike bowler was essentially too quick for them and at 25-5 the game was already over after nine overs. 

 

The ball swung. West's control was excellent and the fielding was the best of the year. A direct hit run out from about 40 yards was combined with a brilliant one handed diving catch from the keeper to crush opposition hopes. There were no recorded misfields and seven good stops. One dropped catch prevented the perfect game. We are now so good in the field I feel slightly disappointed when a full stretch dive to get to an unreachable ball is not snaffled. Outstanding overall and improving all the time. 

 

There was a rally, with the number six scoring a well-considered 52 in 89 balls. No one could give him much support though and, despite lacking our number one spinner, the spinners got rid of the danger man and cleaned up the tail. They scored at 2.4 an over with an SB% of 21%. That fifty prevented it being a farce.

 

One opener developed a migraine while on the field so decided to push someone else up the order so he could rest. West went out before tea to bat for 15 overs. In my ideal world we would have won it before tea. 

 

Instead there was some accurate if danger-free bowling and a few nerves from the openers meaning the start was far too slow. Nine runs in nine overs was very flattering to a bowling attack who needed our batsmen to make mistakes to get wickets. One opener tried to move the score along, but the other decided to defend everything, scoring three in 21 balls and blocking 17 in a row at one point. I looked back at the video and I'm confident not all of those balls were good ones. What I saw was nerves from a naturally attacking and stylish batsman who wanted to "not give it away because we had plenty of time". Instead he started to feel under increasing pressure that no one trusted his plan. We had a chat afterward and he listened when I said I thought he was so concerned with taking his time he forgot to play his natural game. Had he played his normal way we would have sailed along at at least threes if not fours. He said seeing off the new ball was his plan and everyone should trust him, I advised that he needs to forget about what everyone else thinks. If he is confident in his plan he needs to do what he needs to do. He's the one with the bat in the middle! I think if he had ignored the situation and batted normally he would have been fine.

 

It showed a little once he was out. The pair came together on 29-1 from 14 and won it in the 29th by batting as normal. They rattled along at five an over with almost zero danger, both finish not out in the thirties.  

 

I think we can learn something from that as a team: Players need to feel confident in their games, and we need to support each other even if we disagree with the tactic. The time to discuss it is after the match or at training when we can review. Otherwise, like this opener, we risk putting them under extra pressure when they are most doubting themselves. 

 

Nevertheless, overall it was a complete team performance and great to see. We should take a lot of confidence that we performed our skills as well as possible. We will come up against stronger opposition, but if we play as well as we did in this match, they will also struggle. We did the basics well, and threw in some world-class moments to top it off. The second half of the season looms with positive signs. 

 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
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I love it when players innovate by themselves. 

 

Last night - while the 2nd XI put a strong GHK side to bed in the T20 - a handful of bowlers decided to practice their yorkers. The problem was that we only had a few yards to practice in and no pitch. 

 

So, we found an old crate that was put on a yorker length, set up the stumps (and a marker cone for a good length for variation) and tried to bowl the ball under the crate for instant feedback on hitting the length. Boom!

 

This was entirely self-directed. Brilliant lads, brilliant. 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
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Training has been progressing smoothly in recent weeks. We are in a nice pattern somewhere between honing the basics with a small set of drills, and trying new things.


It's tough to have any structured progressions with the sessions as players availability is so variable. We have a lot of midweek cricket and most players choose to play their midweek game rather than attend training. Alongside unexpectedly good weather, players are looking to manage fatigue, with some players hitting four games a week.


For those who do attend, I do my best to provide an environment where player-led improvement is the cornerstone. My philosophy is to learn how individuals work, analyse what they need, allow them to guide their own progress and avoid the pitfalls of just doing what they want without any specific focus (see; taking high catches over infielding and "having a hit" with the bat).


Sometimes I provide more structure, depending on the atmosphere and players. For example, most of the first team players are very focused on their game plan and know what they need to to in any session to be ready for the weekend. There is little I need to do in terms of games and drills beyond the usual stuff.


In the last session, where it was wet underfoot but dry above, we had a small group of mainly younger players (13-15) with a few recreational seniors and two regular first team players. So, I decided we would have a little more structure to set an example to the juniors: A few minutes focused fielding followed by a high-intensity batting drill in nets.


Sadly, the two first team guys - who should have set the example - decided they were not up for anything I suggested and had a general mope about: Complaining they didn't want to field at all and taking 20 minutes to get going, putting in a half-hearted effort in the field, and finally refusing to participate in the game I set up in nets. At one point a player said to me "I can do what I want" in front of the juniors.


Naturally, my pride was a little hurt, but mostly it made me sad for those two players. They got nothing from the practice session. Worse, they showed the juniors that first team cricketers are unenthusiastic and disrespectful. They message they sent to those boys was you don't need to try very hard at nets, you just hit a few balls and go home.


Working with players to work out what they need to do is a huge part of my job. telling them what to do is a rare thing. Yet if players have no goal and are not prepared to have one, then I will step in to create one. Otherwise we are spinning wheels.


The batting drill involved a lot of running. I chose it specifically because energy was low and I wanted to boost people up and enthuse them. I wanted to see how they responded to the extra pressure of batting with heart rate up and I wanted to see if they could get focused rather than having a hit. On all counts, both 1st XI batsmen failed. What does that say about their character and ability in testing circumstances?


As I always say when someone objects to a drill; I can't force them. You have to commit and if you don't commit you better nail your skills on a Saturday afternoon. I hope both those guys bat brilliantly at the weekend. My question is, have they given themselves the best chance of that in the time available?


If the answer is yes, and they got exactly what they needed from the session, then I have the ability to admit my ideas are wrong. I fear the real answer is "I was going through the motions". Even if they won't admit it out loud.


The good news is that the junior guys did commit to all the drills and vastly outperformed their seniors. That made me happy. I will work on making sure I get my message across better to the senior guys so they understand what I am asking of them.

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
Great weather, great ground: Arbroath United. 

Great weather, great ground: Arbroath United. 

Three competitive games and three losses this weekend. Here's the summary: 

The league game against Poloc was won by their pro, scoring 127 in 119 balls to chase down 240.

West had shown up well in our innings with two top order fifties, two fifty partnerships and the tail chipping in again with a valuable 41 runs in five overs. SB% was a solid 37%, with 68 singles hit. There were 27 runs stolen.

 

Poloc were poor in the field, letting 18 byes and dropping nine catches. They only saved 8 runs in the field too. Compare that to West: four drops, 12 runs saved. Overall West came out seven runs on top. It just shows how important getting the right player out becomes. The pro was dropped and he won the game.

 

The West bowling might have been better in one respect: Wickets. Seven taken was the lowest of the year so far, despite Poloc having a no greater control percentage than average. 

 

Again, all of the metrics we use to judge the game were won by West and, for the second match of the year, we lost. A positive sign for West, and a sign that cricket is never predictable! The lesson I take from this is that it's not enough to be better at running, bowling straight and fielding that the opposition, we need to be so good at those things that even a professional cricketer can't get away. It won't happen every time, but it is the benchmark we should set ourselves.

 

The second XI - who have destroyed all comers this year - also lost. Reports from the captain suggested there was very poor bowling (50 extras) and a batsman who got lucky to give the opposition a reasonable score. However, the batting fell apart under moderate pressure and the twos were bowled out. With a side this strong, I'm hoping it's a glitch that can be corrected quickly. 

 

In the cup match on Sunday, there was a huge gulf between the teams that showed us up. Arbroath played well to score 310 on a featherbed pitch with lightning outfield. However, West's batting fell to pieces. At 44-4 the game was essentially over. There were three run outs, one was so horrifyingly bad I struggle to believe it happened.

 

A batsman was playing nicely but hit a ball straight up to deep midwicket. The fielder dropped the ball but the batsman had not moved. Instead of the usual "jog to the other end in vain hope" he had been ball watching. Both batsmen were at the same end. By the time he reacted he was run out. Insane times and one of the main errors that cost the game.

 

There was a sprightly effort from the middle order and tail but it was too little too late. On the easiest pitch you will ever bat on, we barely made 180. It was the worst batting performance this year by some margin.

 

Stats from the game:  

  • West saved six runs in the field and took four catches.
  • West dropped six catches and misfielded 10 balls (most of which went for four).
  • Arbroath stole 18 singles through good running. West managed 11. 

It was our first "minus" performance in the field for the year. Arbroath taught us a lesson that no matter how well you play, someone is better than you. I hope we see this as a way to motivate ourselves to further improve. 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
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  West of Scotland 200-9. Renfrew 183-9. West of Scotland win by 17 runs.

 

Another win in the league for the first eleven keeps the momentum going. It was closer than previous matches, but West always had a nose in front.

 

After a few post game conversations, this game got me thinking about what we define as success. More on that later.

 

After losing the toss and being put in, we expected it to be tough going. The pitch was not true (some balls popping) and the ball swung early. Thanks to some excellent drop and run tactics and patient batting, the score was 35-1 from 10. I thought this was partially down to the poor fielding of Renfrew but also good strategy to stay patient.

 

The next 23 overs saw a big stand with few boundaries but continued singles (we scored over 80 in total, our best of the year by some margin). 90 runs were scored, pushing the rate up to just under fours. There was some luck here too. Several dropped catches and a missed run out allowed us to plow on. A couple of batsmen were disappointed to go at a slow rate at this time. It's true a few runs were missed out but I'll take that rate if it means we get some luck!

 

However, as has been the case this year, none of the top order pushed on. This would have seen 25 or more on the board in the last third of the innings. Wickets fell regularly, and West's batting strength showed as 75 runs were scored in 17 (4.41) with six wickets falling. This was the least impressive phase. I would look for more runs, but it was understandable that the rate could not climb when wickets fall. It could have been much worse had the last four not added 55 while at the crease and got through 10 overs. You can't expect that every week.

 

In the end, whatever way we got there, 200 would be a challenging score for Renfrew. They have a reputation for playing higher risk cricket. This might mean they easily knock off scores if the "hit out" tactic pays off, but West knew chances would come. I said at half time that if we "win" the fielding (hold catches, save runs) we win the game. It would take something brilliant to do otherwise.

 

In fact, Renfrew started with extreme caution. West fielded well and bowled a length that the batsmen found tough to get away. Renfrew did a lot of defending and rarely took risks. However, they also were unable to rotate the strike meaning they spent 25 overs getting to 50. The control was over 80% and only two wickets fell in the first 35 overs. We assumed "block or hit" when they mostly blocked.

 

From here, you know risks have to be taken to get back in the game. This is where to show the difference: You take your chances and stay patient when opposition risks pay off. Again, the difference is about fielding.

 

The rate increased. The next 50 was scored in 11 overs with only one more wicket falling. Chances were hard to come by. There were two difficult chances dropped, but the tight fielding helped keep the score under control. Despite going at almost five an over, the rate was getting away. There was 101 needed in 14 overs, more than seven an over.

 

Wickets in hand meant that Renfrew still felt in the hunt. The fact was, no one had yet scored at seven an over in this match. And West were better in the field, meaning Renfew would need to be bang on. It would take an extremely cool head to do it for 14 overs so West were on to win.

 

Naturally, overconfidence is costly. Yet on the other hand, it's a powerful position knowing that, to win, all you need to do is the basics well; something West had done all game. 12 runs were saved by good fielding and seven were lost to unforced errors. With over 20 runs lost by Renfew, you can see the difference.

 

This panned out in the death as the rated climbed. Eight an over from 10. Nine an over from five. 23 runs needed from the last 12 balls and 18 needed from the last six balls. There was no stage in the innings where Renfrew were favourites. That said, there was no stage where the game was out of reach. It just became increasingly unlikely.

 

The result went with the odds. It was a solid victory.

 

Some other KPIs:

 

  • Both teams had 80% control. However, West scored off 11% more balls and scored both more singles and boundaries.
  • West stole 26 singles to Renfrew's six. West saved 12 runs in good stops to Renfrew's six.
  • West bowled three fewer wides.

 

In other words, it was victory in every area.

 

After the game, there was a lot of talk about how the win should have been more comprehensive. One person even suggested we should (not "could" but "should") have won by 200 runs. Although there were also more tempered opinions. It seems that there is some disagreement about what success looks like. For many, it's outplaying the opposition enough to win. For others only demolishing a weaker side is enough.

 

The general consensus as to why the win was closer than hoped was that the top order were not scoring fifties and the bowling was too focused on defending rather than taking wickets.

 

The question I asked in response to this is, "what can be done differently?"

 

No batsman goes out to hit twenty or thirty and get out. So, any accusations of "not wanting it enough" is vague and lacking a practical element. Similarly, in the field the accusation of "sitting back and not trying to take wickets" has no practical point. I wanted to know what we should actually do.

 

We didn't come up with much other than to change the bowling.

 

My thought was as it always is; keep focusing on process. Bat and bowl to your game plan and look to hone it at training as best you can. See it early. Play it late and straight. Pick up singles. Bowl dots. Field like every run is the one that wins you the match. Catch more than you drop. These are basic things but if you do them better than the opposition you will win most games.

 

There will be times where a flash of brilliance takes a game away, but this is a rare thing. It's far more likely that the team with fewer mistakes is the winner. If you have fewer misfields and drops, if you hit the target more (with bowling and fielding), if you bowl fewer wides, if you are in control of more shots, you win.

 

It's not glamorous. You don't win many games by 10 wickets or 200 runs. However, it is realistic and you do win more games overall. It's this consistency of performance based on good processes that is what I consider success. So far this season we have been consistently better in all the important metrics. And we are looking to improve further. That's exactly what I want.

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
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West of Scotland 144-5. Weirs 89. West of Scotland win by 55 runs (match reduced to 30 overs). 

The only game to be staged in the division (due to rain) saw West put in the best performance of the year to win easily against Weirs. 

 

The weather had been bad all week, meaning the chances of play were low. The 2nd XI game was called off early. The pitch was green and wet.  The morning rain cleared and the sun came out to dry the outfield quickly. However, the scheduled 12pm start was never an option and there was a lot of waiting while the umpires inspected, waited and inspected again.

 

This is a huge challenge for cricketers used to playing at 12. We sat. A few grumbled about the conditions. We didn't know when we would start and even if we could get the game on. That causes your energy to delplete. You feel like you are running on sand and start assuming the pitch will be unplayable. You think about other things you could be doing. I told one of our batsmen that he had to get his mindset into playing in these conditions because he said  the pitch was impossible before we had even bowled a ball. Negativity is a huge danger of waiting around. It leaks into your performance.

 

Eventually, we got the call the game would be 30 overs starting at 3pm. We had an hour to get the game mentality right.  Tellingly, our opposition did a quick knockabout, while we went through all our warm up routines; pulse raising, mobility, throwing, catching, stopping and bowling through. Most importantly, we pulled the energy levels up by the bootlaces. This reenergising effort was the best post-delay warm up I have ever seen in a club side. One spectator said to me we looked "very impressive" in the warm up. Now that's a great start!

 

Of course, warming up is nothing without a good performance. We were put in to bat and still manage to start slowly. Good bowling saw off a new opener and going was slow on an outfield and pitch that offered little value for shots. The bowling was accurate. After 10 overs West were 26-1. 

 

The rate was just beginning to accelerate when three wickets were lost in two overs leaving the score on a precarious 46-5 from 17 (just when the last five overs had seen the rate rise to a better 3.8).

 

However, this was the last wicket to fall. Second string bowling, some poor field setting and terrible fielding allowed the seventh wicket pair to hit the ball into gaps and run hard. They put on 98 runs at 7.53 an over (and that was with just three boundaries). A wonderful 45 ball fifty was the highlight.

 

From here, it was going to take an exceptional innings from Weirs. They did not seem to have the batting. It was a the same score after 10 (30-1) but when Weirs looked to push on, wickets fell and didn't stop while the rate climbed. West's twin spinners and ring fields with the slow conditions saw Weirs have no answer and creep to 44-4 from 16. The rate needed was 7.2 but the rate in the last few was 2.5. As you would expect, the batsmen tried to hit out. It was to no avail as West kept the screw tight and bowled out Weirs.

 

From my point of view it was satisfying that the fielding was nailed on. Six catches (two drops) and overall evens on runs saved (we saved four, but misfielded three). Weirs only stole one single compared to 14 for West. I'll take an overall plus 14 every day. That wins you games alone.

 

It was our best performance to date. 

 

Finally, a quick note on Sunday where we played an official first XI 40 over knockout cup game with a team of mixed ability players (three first teamers only). West lost by one wicket in a nail biter. We were let down by poor fielding from weaker players and a horrible batting collapse despite having a decent batting line up. We still got close, taking them to the last pair despite only having 116 to defend. There was also a much needed fifty from an out of form new player. While you hate to lose any match, if I had to choose one it would be this game. The competition is almost pointless and certainly a game too many for most first team players who need to rest. Next year we may field a second XI side as it provides much needed higher standard practice for guys wanting to force the way in.

 

 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
West of Scotland take the field at Irvine

West of Scotland take the field at Irvine

Irvine 215-9. West of Scotland 193. Irvine win by 22 runs.

 

Despite a good overall performance, West were outbowled to lose the first competitive game of 2016.

 

Winning the toss, West chose to bowl on what looked like a seamer's paradise: uneven, green and soft. It looked like another low scorer, especially when an early wicket fell. However, due to a short boundary on one side, there were a lot of boundaries scored.

 

Additionally, several Irvine batsmen played the situation well. An opener dug in to make a fifty at a strike rate of 50 and SB% of 34%. Others attacked around him at faster rates including a 19 ball 28, 49 ball 43 and 10 ball 15.

 

Despite this, The overall Irvine control was just over 71%. West wrestled control back several times by bowling tight lines, beating the bat between the boundaries and good fielding. This made me confident. In the first game we won with better overall control of the match. I felt with the different conditions, 215 was a challenge but possible to get. Irvine could have got 240 if control was better.

 

Fielding stats showed us on +3 for runs saved vs. runs lost to misfields. They pinched 10 runs with good running. We dropped four catches. One is too many, but four was costly. We also took four catches and executed another direct hit run out.

 

The chat at half time was confidence. One player was vocally determined to win it for us because he had never got a fifty. There was a general determination in the ranks. The talk was about how we could win rather than what we did wrong.

 

We lost the openers cheaply. This caused a wobble in confidence on the balcony, especially as both shots were poorly executed. However, number three and four settled the ranks with a stand of 64 in 84 balls. At 25 overs West were 92-2, compared to 104-3 from Irvine. 4.9 per over needed and we had been going at 4.6. Additionally, control was 79%. Looking good, and the atmosphere was still of determined confidence.

 

However instead of maintaining this, the next 12 overs saw 45-4 runs. 3.7 per over is understandable with wickets falling, but this phase made the challenge much greater. Overall control also dropped. One of our attacking batsman was tied down by the Irvine bowlers bowling at the stumps. Other middle order guys were bowled and LBW, telling a story of how straight the bowling was (and Irvine bowled half the wides of West).

 

From this point it was going to need something special from the two at the crease. It was possible with those two batsman - who can both go big - but the chance of winning felt like it had ticked over to Irvine. As it turned out the lower order had a go with some big hits but with 85 needed from 78 balls, it needed magic we didn't find. Most teams would struggle to do that with numbers eight to jack at the crease. Overall control was 78%.

 

West pinched 29 runs through good running and misfields (compared to Irvine's 19). Irvine saved nine runs through good stops or poor running from West, meaning the overall fielding difference was +1. That means for the match, West were +4. That's not enough to make a difference to the result, but good to know.

 

So we fielded slightly better and were in control for more of the match. We lost out on the bowling side, with Irvine's tactic of tying down batsman and taking wickets through errors working well.

 

In review, we could have won the game playing exactly the same way (either bowling them out for 170 or maintaining control between overs 25-35). I feel the tactics were basically sound, it simply needs better execution by bowling more straight balls and keeping control with the bat.

 

That said, we could further tighten our fielding to save another 10-20 runs, especially the catching. The batsman can start to consider how they will play under the pressure of a chase and tight bowling. The bowlers can reduce that wides number.

 

Scottish Cup: Stoneywood Dyce 161. West of Scotland 162-7. West of Scotland win by 3 wickets.

 

On Sunday, there was a three hour drive to play the first round proper of the knockout cup. The game was won by a superb, controlled 87 not out from West's number three.

 

I was playing so didn't do a full analysis. The ball swung early on a good wicket with a short boundary and we quickly had them 29-4 after 10. We were a bowler short so looked to find 10 overs and this gave a recovery to Stoneywood, digging in to get to 117-4 from 27. Partially, this was a gap in bowling, partially it was some fielding that was a little loose and partially it was some good batting from a Stoneywood overseas player.

 

However, the next 13 overs saw 44-6, which was a collapse in any language. Stoneywood seemed to not have a lot of depth, and after the middle overs slowness in the field West tight end up, bowled good lines and let the batsman get themselves out.

 

The batting again wobbled up top. There was some poor calling and a run out. An opener and the number four were tied down by excellent seam bowling for a long time. Number three also looked to survive for the first 30 balls he was on, scoring just 11, while the score crept to 23-2 from 12.

 

When the second string came on, the rate improved, getting to 75-3 from 23 (4.7 an over during this phase). Number three was looking more comfortable all the time, and he had good support from both five and eight. There was a phase where two wickets fell quickly, and an end was open (98-6 from 32). It could have been scary, but the generally feeling from the sideline was nervous excitement. We felt it was close but we had the game if we stayed strong, and with the anchor role being played to perfection, all was required was for the guy at the other end to nip a single and watch.

 

The game was essentially won when West hit the returning opening bowler for 15 in 12 balls, taking the score on to 147-6 in 39 overs. The game was finished in the 42nd.

 

It was a very similar situation to the previous day, even down to the short boundary. However this time the plan worked much better in the field and the batting had an anchor role that went the distance.

 

Yet again, my main area for improvement is the fielding. Standards are high, so players can be harder on themselves over diving to stop the ball or putting a body behind it. We also could bowl fewer wides (9 bowled costing 25 runs). However, I think we should continue to set high standards and be able to "switch back on" when we make a mistake. We did that very well in this game.

 

Naturally, I would also look to the top order to tighten up the basics. We had two run outs, both unforced errors rather than excellent fielding. There is a batsman with a technical issue that has crept in. However, the example set from such a well paced innings is something we can continue.

 

Overall a positive weekend, with the seconds smashing another opponent too. (putting up over 300 before bowling them out). Despite the league loss, we have shown we can bounce back and are keen to learn from it. And we even played well in that game! Nine wins from 10 and still full of positive vibes.

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
Late evening nets in Glasgow

Late evening nets in Glasgow

Thursday sessions seem to have settled into a far more relaxed practice. There are fewer players and the first team guys tend to stay away, leaving room for new members and guys hovering around the second and third teams. This naturally gives a less intense feel to things.

 

However, it is still enough of a mixture of guys that you can get something done. I wouldn't want it to get so relaxed that it is a social event rather than practice. And the guys all have a focused approach, even those not getting a regular game.

 

We did a couple of fielding drills and then had nets. I tested out a new sensor for PitchVision just to see if it worked (it did). I ran the drills, focusing on ground work of course, and asked guys again to self-manage nets with the instruction of fielding when not bowling. 

 

Naturally, the fielding idea fell apart quickly. I am still experimenting with what kind of self-policed training works and what doesn't. Most things just don't work with these club guys. No one takes responsibility to manage it and it stops as soon as the coach looks away. This is frustrating to me, but there is little I can do. I can't manage two or three separate groups at once so must rely on players self-managing and people taking leadership. I am still thinking how we can change this.

 

That said, players are starting to get the message that they can do stuff without needing a prompt from the coach every time. In this session several guys did their own thing with fielding drills while I was otherwise engaged. The bowling in nets did not become a free for all with the bowling. Guys helped each other out by hitting balls and bowling past when they could have stopped. It was an encouraging environment.

 

Oe of the down sides of the "self-sufficient" approach is players use it as an excuse to do nothing. One guy arrived early at nets but did not emerge from the changing room until around 20 minutes after training had begun. He was fully padded up because a young bowler had decided to get a quick bowl done alone in nets. The batsman in question had not warmed up with the others because he is resting a sore shoulder and bruised hand. However he did still participate in things later when it suited him. 

 

He might argue he just wants to bat due to resting his niggles. It's a good point. It also looks terrible when a first team player saunters around like he owns the place. He is creating a reputation as someone who is only out for himself and doesn't care about with his own team mates or other club members. People notice this and naturally give you less of a chance as a result. It's human nature to want to avoid people you don't like.

 

However, I was glad to see that he helped out later, throwing and hitting balls for others and even bowling a few in nets when I know he genuinely does have a bad shoulder. This is good to see and I hope it came via the example of others who threw themselves into helping out.

 

Also, despite the lower overall standards, I kept insisting on maintaining the basics to a high level. I have taken on feedback about being a touch more serious about the standards I want to see. Now I am pushing people to go for and take catches, throw themselves at the ball and return throws to me with accuracy. I disapprove when it goes wrong much more vocally, and maintain the positive reinforcement when it goes well.  

 

Im personally learning that to get the best from people as a coach, I need to understand each person individually and adapt. There are times when a group needs a leader and some direction. However, the less I do that, the more likely it becomes that training does not go as planned. My job is to better design the sessions so they better match the player's personalities. I'm slowly learning what that is for each person. Meanwhile, the ultimate aim is to push at their limits to help them get the best from themselves.

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
Outdoor net practice with first team players.

Outdoor net practice with first team players.

One theme I thread through training is that of becoming exceptionally good at the basics. If you can catch, stop, throw, bowl a good length, drive and pull you are going to be a success! 

 

So, with a smaller group due to a third XI game, we focused on making sure these basics were honed again and again. By the way, the thirds won. That's six wins from six competitive matches.

 

We warmed up with the new drill from last week to get everyone running around. I focused on slightly altering my tone after getting feedback that it could be less "jokey" and more "intense". I'm a happy guy and I love cricket - even when things are going badly - so I'll never totally lose the jovial nature. However, I can slip into headmaster mode when needed. This trial run saw me offering plenty of praise and encouragement, but also a sharp word to those who didn't get standards right. 

 

After this, the new coach and I reiterated that everyone is trusted to do what they need to do to succeed, but that is not an excuse to be half-hearted. We split into two groups for nets and fielding. I asked the nets group to do something slightly different; bowlers who were not bowling fielded at mid on and mid off. I told them it was in their interest to do this at match intensity because this is practice for matches.

 

However, one guy bowled in a cap and barely fielded. Others sort of did it to start with, but by the end it was a free bowl with no fielding. This was not a great upset as the guys at the end were less serious anyway. However, again, these guys can all benefit from being focused at practice. In this session we were not at the level of intensity we needed to be to make improvements. Players need to understand that this impact on others when you bowl or field poorly. I will continue to stress the need to take responsibility for others as well as yourself.

 


Fielding drills at West of Scotland

Fielding drills at West of Scotland

Meanwhile, the fielding was self directed. Naturally this means lots of high catches and some ground work. I would still rather see a higher ratio of lower catches, but the volume is vey high and every catch makes a difference to players chances in matches.  

 

I tried to compensate with some work using the Katchet  (throwing onto it with the Sidearm ball thrower for extra pace and carry) to give low catches to a few guys. This worked well and is now a 100% staple drill for better fielders in the squad. 

 

Finally, I did my secret favourite thing: keeper work. I worked with our main keeper on standing up to the stumps. I gave a few pointers on leg side work and threw balls like a spinner to practice staying low and moving quickly. We even got a batsman who was hanging about to do some shadow batting to help. I was a fun way to end the session. 

 

For future sessions, I plan to keep pushing up against players intensity levels. I also want to put pressure on the players by challenging them with things like running between the wickets and playing under pressure. These things can be done with the right focus and every session feels more like people understand the way I do things, just as I am beginning to learn how the players respond to things. It really is true that the coach is the student of the players and not the other way round. 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe

West of Scotland took the weekend apart, maintaining a 100% win record for both 1st and 2nd XI sides. This included a win in the Scottish Cup.

West of Scotland Cricket Club 1st XI in the pre-match huddle. 

West of Scotland Cricket Club 1st XI in the pre-match huddle. 

Hillhead 103. West of Scotland 104-6. West of Scotland win by 4 wickets.

 

Saturday's league match was a strong performance against a weaker side. West bowled first on a difficult wicket where some balls popped and others kept low. The first two wickets fell quickly. However, as always happens, a pair got more settled and put on a stand. Once this was broken there was another flurry of wickets followed by another stand where batsmen decided to hit out and got away with a few hits. Eventually this was broken too. The number eleven hung around while the number five looked to get as many as he could, but 103 was not enough even on this poor wicket.

 

My main learning point about the innings was how hard we are on ourselves. There were very few mistakes yet the tone from the loudest voices at the break was how we should have bowled them out for 50. If everything had gone well, then this was feasible, but to beat yourself up for imperfection is foolish. Perfect games come about very rarely. It's not an indicator of future success to be perfect or imperfect. We put in a very strong performance and it was more than enough with the ball. You might call it a B+ rather than an A+. 

 

Of course, there are areas to work on. We gave away five runs in misfields (but even there we saved three with good stops, finishing on only -2). We dropped two tricky but possible chances (and caught two, one very good one). It was a good performance in the field that can still be taken up a notch.

 

There were 13 wides, which is also acceptable with room to improve. The Hillhead SB% was 22% which you would expect for a low score on a poor wicket. The RpSS was 1.98 (37 singles). The control was 64%. This shows how West dominated with the ball.

 

West's stats with the bat were different; 77% control (excellent on a poor wicket) and SB% was 26%. RpSS was 2.38 (21 singles). It is encouraging there were more boundaries scored and yet the SB% was also higher. When you see that West also stole 14 runs (losing 5 to poor running or good fielding), you can easily see how dominant a performance it was. 

 

The runs were scored in 27 overs. This was due mainly to aggressive play from two batsmen after a solid foundation was set in the first 10 (30-1). From 10-18, another 29 were added, and with the addition of an attacking batsman, the last 9.3 overs saw 45 runs.

 

However one stat that is most worrisome is wickets. Six were lost in the chase.  With such a high control and good RpO, the thought is batsmen were getting themselves out. However, analysing the wickets reveals it wasn't so bad; an LBW on a ball that nipped in, bowled from a ball that went away, and bowled from a ball that kept low account for three wickets. On all three the batsmen might have been lucky but didn't do too much wrong.

 

The other three were a technical error (caught leading edge), shouldering arms caught LBW (poor judgement let's say but it could have been a good ball too), and bowled after being distracted. The last one the batsman should have pulled away but decided to continue, so although the distraction was not his fault (and an external mistake), he took responsibility. On another day, at least four of the six wickets could have gone the other way and did not fully involve batsman error.

 

It meant the negative view could be taken that West did not finish clinically. While this is true, it also need to be mitigated. The stats were superior in every department and even in wickets fallen there was a 40% improvement on the opposition!

 

As always, we take what happened at the weekend with a "stop, start, continue" view and work on processes at training. With the ball we can sharpen the fielding further, maybe even pulling off some better dives and stops. The bowling can improve in accuracy but the tactics are working so it's just a matter of confidence and fitness unless a bowler has something extra he wants to try. With the bat, we need to individually review game plans and decide if it's working at the moment. Just because you got out for a low score doesn't mean your plan failed or you didn't try hard enough. If the plan is wrong, change it. If the plan is right, work on honing it further at nets.

 

A note on the 2nds who also won on Saturday (but I was not there); They are playing a strong side against terrible opposition. A 10 wicket win on Saturday is no fun or practice for anyone. The big challenge is to keep everyone interested and competing for places. However, two new batsmen got runs and will look to challenge for a first team place. 

  

Hanshakes after West of Scotland's win over Irvine in the Scottish Cup

Hanshakes after West of Scotland's win over Irvine in the Scottish Cup

Scottish Cup: Irvine 91. West of Scotland 92-3. West of Scotland win by 7 wickets

Sunday saw a cup match for the 1st team. I played and so did not do a full match analysis. However, you can see from the score that the match was even more one-sided.

 

It was the same pitch and so scoring freely was always a challenge against good first team bowling. West had a close to full strength team against a clearly weakened Irvine. Yet again, there was some frustration about the fielding and, while I don't have the stats, it was almost always West in charge. The only tactic that worked for Irvine was for the tail to block to try and use up the overs. SB% was 19%. However, at least no naysayer was complaining about how were should have done better. 

 

With the bat, it was all over in 21 overs. 27-2 from the first nine and 65-1 in the last 12. Five an over on such a poor wicket shows the power of being on top in the match. Great credit goes to West's number four who scored a run a ball 31 to close out the game. It was also nice to see a senior batsman who struggled last year to find a role make a cameo 5 not out when in other times he might have either blocked too much or got out after putting himself under pressure to finish the game. Progress. 

 

What made me happy was that the games were very similar yet we showed a marked improvement in the second go. Certainly an A-. If we improve by this much every game we will be invincible. However, more likely is we will come under more pressure from stronger sides. We need to use the confidence gained in these games to get ready for harder challenges.

 

Train hard to play easy! 

 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
Middle wicket practice at West of Scotland Cricket Club

Middle wicket practice at West of Scotland Cricket Club

After an indoor session on ​Wednesday, we had a wicket and some warm weather to have a rare middle practice on Thursday.

Indoor nets​

​The rain forced us entirely indoors on Wednesday. Numbers were down and it was mainly club guys rather than performance players. However, with some ambitious guys eager to learn we used the bowling machine and PitchVision to do some technical work on various things.

An opener worked on hitting the gaps, a lower order player tried his hand at coming down the wicket to seamers and another opener looked to develop his skill at leaving outside the off stump. A few others did some work while the rest had a net in the other lane. Standard stuff​, but it was something productive from what would have been a cancelled session outdoors.

Fielding drill​s

When the sun came up the next day, our wonderful groundsman sidled up to me and asked me if I wanted an old wicket rolled so we could use it. I jumped at the chance! So while I drilled the guys he did his magic.​

The warm up drill we tried was a new one to me and I was concerned it wouldn't work. However, it was a great success, mainly due to one of our senior guys throwing himself into it and motivating everyone to do it. It's called the 4 stump game and you can see it here (honestly, it's easier than it looks).​ It warms up pick ups, throws, catches and backing up in one go.

As the middle practice went on later​, I asked guys to do some self-directed fielding drills. I popped in once or twice to help a bit but generally some guys just took leadership roles, moved players between practice groups, worked on different skills and kept moving.

I was delighted to see this, and feel like my mantra of "work it out for yourself" is getting through.

Middle practice​

Video analysis during middle practice

Video analysis during middle practice

 

The main practice was a middle practice with the throwdown net string up on the leg side to save fetching balls. The off side was open and guys took turns to field there while two batters took runs.

 

It wasn't perfect: the fielders were not as serious as they could have been, there was no specific planning or pressure on the players and the balance between bat and ball was not always right. On a more high performance session I would like to add better focus to improve it further.

 

Broadly though, the learning opportunity was for guys to feel comfortable batting in the middle and running rather than being in the safety of the net.  This worked well and players got a more realistic session than they would in a normal net. We also had a researcher in to do video analysis on some players backlifts and he was more than happy to make a few pointers to players on technique.

 

And yet again, some senior guys took it upon themselves to manage the players and make sure everyone got a go. 

 

I don't think this kind of mixed ability session could have gone better in the circumstances. I am sure everyone got something from it. The next step is to get something even better done at a higher level on the Tuesday session.

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe

There was a strange energy about this session, but a new coach to help me kept things going.

Fielding drill for the infield. 

Fielding drill for the infield. 

As it was a wet day (although a dry evening) I decided to have some fun in the warm up and get people throwing themselves around. We did some warm up stuff that was slightly silly but also useful for diving skills. My idea was scuppered when several people flatly refused to do it. Reasons ranged from "I'm here to play cricket" to "I've got a bad back". Nonsensical in my mind, and also disrespectful to the coach. I wasn't happy.

 

After a short stand off where some people insanely stood still and watched others warm up, I gave in and tried something else. It was equally silly yet everyone did it and enjoyed it. I will have to think how to deal with this petulant nonsense. I'm all for people doing their own thing, but when they decide their own thing is nothing, something is not right. Perhaps  I will reiterate that if people don't want to do my warm up, they could do something else. After all, "standing about" is seen as a major sin usually.

 

Fortunately, I had a new coach to help me this week. He is a senior player and talented cricketer. He took the pressure off me quite a bit by making sure a group got a good batting and bowling session in the indoor nets, then ran some high intensity fielding drills. I trust his skills and it allows me to do other things.

 

I would like some better planning done with him, but I sense he is not the planning type. This is probably a good thing as I tend to over-plan. However, we barely got the chance to speak at all and I would have at least liked him to understand my focus for the session. We may have to do that via WhatsApp in future as setting time aside to meet is not an option. Nevertheless, that is a minor point. The fact he is there to hit balls and advise on batting tactics is plenty awesome. 

 

Indoor nets

We split into two groups. One indoors to bat and bowl and one outdoors to field. I stuck to fielding while the other coach did some batting. I asked the guys to write down their outcome for the session. This is the lightest touch I can possibly ask for focus during a session. Here's what I got (I smudged the names):

 

image.jpg

As you can see only eight people did it from a group of twice that. I'm less concerned with some of the third team level guys doing it - although they still can and should - but was again disappointed by the approach of some senior first team players who didn't even bother to write down a word or two. Additionally, no one wrote down if they succeeded.

 

I appreciate habits are hard to change. Yet, this was so easy, the gains are so good and was even under the supervision of a coach. I must admit this - combined with the warm up - got me down a little. I am supposed to be there to help people, but how can I help them if they won't even do the absolute least they could do? I realise this is a bit of my ego talking so shouldn't let it get to me, but last night it certainly did. I'm compromising on my measuring outcomes mantra severely and I am getting about 40% success back. Work needed.

 

I will persevere and ask players to keep doing this until we get it right. It's not hard, shows people are listening to me and will help them improve. I'll draft in my new coach to help with this. And try to not let my pride feel hurt.

 

Fielding drills

 

Meanwhile outside, we worked on requested skills of pick up and throw in the ring, stopping the firmly hit ball and high catching.

 

We had a set of stumps with the middle stump half height to aim at for the throws. I coached trying to hit the middle stump and drilled the guys from both the right and left hand side. I let them know that this drill is tough because there is a high failure rate, but if one person gets in right one in the season, it's worth the effort. 

 

We had another minor "weird energy" moment during this drill where a player missed his throw and had to get the ball. Everyone else had run quickly to get out of the way but he decided to walk like it was a thousand mile journey. I tried to energise him to go quickly, which seemed to slow him down further. So we had to stop the whole drill while he sauntered past. I could have kept the drill going (it was safe) but I wanted to make the point this was meant to be high energy and he was the opposite.

 

Other odd moments: One player not taking part in the fielding section after having a bat. One player claiming he had an injured arm for throwing nicks to a team mate but was fine throwing at the stumps in a drill. One player complaining a drill should be more high energy when that wasn't the point of the drill. Like I said, an odd feeling.  Maybe all these things had valid reasons, but from the coaches' viewpoint it looked like a few people were half-hearted.

 

Still we finished with some ground fielding and high catching work while three guys did some throwdowns on the outfield. That was all energetic, especially when run by the new coach. One upgrade I must remember to a fielding drill is to combine a volume section (lots of hands on the ball quickly) with a focus section of the same skill (less volume, more realistic). This should keep people moving but also get the realism in.

 

Overall, despite the lower energy and lack of focus, we had a session where people got things done. We have a great opportunity to keep this improving this season if we get out processes right. Today was not that day, but it gives me hope that even a low session can be productive.

 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe
West of Scotland leave the field after victory over Stirling County

West of Scotland leave the field after victory over Stirling County

West of Scotland 176 (48.1 o). Stirling County 141 (47 o). West of Scotland win by 35 runs. 

It was a satisfying performance for the first game of the league season, as West overcame Stirling despite a game that ebbed and flowed. Last year we would have lost this match, but this year we held firm and stayed confident in our skills.

 

The batting was typical for early season rustiness. The pitch was good and the bowling was below par. 27 wides tells the story there. The batting saw good starts that didn't quite turn into match winning innings: 23, 14, 17, 13, 17 and 36 on the card sum it up. 

 

Our control percentage was 75.24%

 

One batsman was ill but played and aimed to occupy the crease. His 91 ball 23 was crucial to us posting a decent total and his next aim will be to improve his scoring ball percentage when back to full strength. A couple of guys got out to "early season" shots (mistimed shots to ring fielders) and clearly need more time on outdoor pitches.

 

The stand out innings was a well-paced 36 from number eight who was happy combining strike rotation with lusty blows. It was his game plan, and he knows it well. In this match it paid off, and generally it will because it's a well furrowed plan.

 

i was pleased with the strike rotation as well, stealing 24 runs in the innings brought by either good running or opposition misfields. We only missed three runs in our innings and only conceded four runs through misfields when we fielded. A +17 finish.

 

The only criticism laid at anyone was a lower order batsman who also likes to play his shots. He came in, hit some nice shots to get going and mis timed a pull shot to expose the tail with his partner going well at the other end. When this happened we were bowled out in short time. A couple of people mentioned this was a poor choice as he should have focused on rotating the strike and staying in. In my mind, this was not an error. The batsman in question is a powerful striker of the ball and could have scored a lot of runs in the last couple of overs. He had a plan to hit the ball hard and he went for it. On this day it failed. But who's to say thing to pinch a single would have worked either? It's also not like 10 and 11 were rabbits. Both could hang around and score from the friendly bowling. You have to play the game as you see it. If this happens again, I would encourage the batsman to do what his best plan suggests, not what others think is his best plan.

 

At the break a few were overly critical of the score. It's easy to let emotion get in the way and get disappointed about "not getting enough" because we feel we could have scored more. However, to win you don't need to get as many runs as are in the pitch, you simply need more than the opposition.  We went out with a plan, adapted when it didn't go perfectly and kept driving towards a total. Fortunately, our captain has a level head and said to me calmly at the break "if we concede fewer wides and bowl dots we win this game". 

 

He he was right. 

 

In in the field we looked very strong.  Here are some stats:

  • Seven good stops (against four misfields)
  • Four catches (Three drops).
  • Two direct hits on the stumps from five attempts (one run out) 
  • Stirling's control percentage was just 66.17% (compared to 74% for West)
  • Stirling had 67 scoring shots (23.8% SB%) compared to West 76 (26.3%)
  • Stirling scored 39 singles to West 39
  • Stirling scored nine boundaries to West 15
  • 16 wides (compared to 27) 

Even when the score was 29-0 from six, I felt like we were on top. The control was around 50% at one point and it felt like a wicket was going to fall for a long time, despite boundaries being hit.

 

We slowly squeezed with good fielding and accurate bowling, reducing the scoring rate to 84-3  from 25 (West were on 80-3 at the same stage). The two spinners turned the screw in the second half with combined figures of 18-3-39-3 and an SB% of 17%. This was combined with focused fielding including a fine over the shoulder catch and direct hit run out. We should continue this trend.

 

On the improvement side, we could do even better by cutting down on the couple of mistakes we made with ground fielding. Two drops would have been stunning catches but I believe we can take those with focused work. One drop was a regulation slip catch. I put it down to cold and illness, but we should practice slip work even more too.

 

16 wides is also still a few too many. The main issue is knowing what a wide is, as different umpires interpret the local rules differently. The solution is to bowl tighter lines, staying on or just outside the stumps. We can use PitchVision at outdoor practice to assist with this. We must also be careful to remember length is more important than line. I would rather see a bowler hit length more often and bowl more wides than bowl no wides but keep missing length. A wide is one, a half volley or long hop could well be four or six. 

 

Looking forward, there will be times were a very skilled player takes the game away. In this game, the opposition batting was not deep and lacked a superstar. In other games, we need to be sure we can handle someone who is capable of winning the game with fast, free scoring. Good fielding and tight lines is a great strategy, but when you are being smashed you must be able to keep your cool.

 

After the game, the changing room review was brief. The captain had a few words, as did a senior player. I tried to drop on my "stop, start, continue" mantra but heads were already turning to the bar. Fortunately, I could chat to guys over a drink to stress my point: We should enjoy every moment of the win, but never assume we are doing it all right because we won (same as never spend too long in the post mortem when we lose). There is always stuff to improve and always strengths to maintain.

 

But that talk was for Tuesday. For now, let's enjoy the win, sing the club song and recover sore muscles. West of Scotland 2016 has positive signs. 

 

  • Stop: Throwing away a good start. Bowling wides.
  • Start: Preparing for strong opposition. Slip catching, reaction catching. Ground fielding. Better SB%.
  • Continue: Catches and direct hits. Bowling tight line and length.

 

 

 

Posted
AuthorDavid Hinchliffe