To bowl an inswinger shine one side of the ball, and when gripping the cricket ball make sure the seam of the ball is directing towards first slip.
2007-02-19 02:01:13
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answer #1
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answered by Dan64 2
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Some folk have as much trouble asking questions as answering them! This one and the ball rolling along the ground belong in the same family.
Assuming you mean "How do you bowl an inswinger" then read on...
The inswinger moves in the air from the off side of a right handed batsman to the leg side.
The later the bowl swings into the batsman, the more effective it will be.
The amount of inswing a bowler can generate depends on plenty of different factors like the weather, the bowler's action and the condition of the ball.
But the most important factor to consider is the grip on the seam of the ball and its direction.
Another point to remember is to work on shining the ball on one side during and before each delivery.
This will help the ball to swing more in the air.
Step One
Grip the ball with the first two fingers close together on the seam, with the seam in a vertical position. The thumb should be on the seam underneath.
Step Two
Angle the seam towards leg slip or, but keeping it vertical. The shiny side of the ball should be furthest from the batsman.
Courtesy of the BBC website.
2007-02-18 04:40:01
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answer #2
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answered by conje50 1
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Swing is a result of uneven airflow over the ball.
You''l notice that bowlers generally try to keep one side of the seem shinier than the other.
Air flows over the shiny side faster than the dull side which creates a relative low pressure over the dull side,
this causes the ball to "swing" towards the low pressure.
2007-02-18 09:19:13
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answer #3
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answered by dinesh v 2
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dont listen to southern dandy he has told you the opposite of how to bowl the inswinger, angling the ball to first slip will result in an outswinger.
it is easier for bowlers with chest on actions to get inswing, but side on bowlers can still achieve it, just keep the seam upright and angle it towards leg slip, also place you're fingers a little further over the top of the ball, in ur action keep a high arm and in the follow through bring you're arm down to the side rather than into you're armpit.
2007-02-19 00:13:32
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Swing is a result of uneven airflow over the ball. You''l notice that bowlers generally try to keep one side of the seem shinier than the other. Air flows over the shiny side faster than the dull side which creates a relative low pressure over the dull side, this causes the ball to "swing" towards the low pressure.
2007-02-18 04:40:42
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answer #5
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answered by famouslighteater 2
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whats the question here....how do you you bowl an inswinger.....??
hold the seam upright between your two forefingers and thumb, then twist the seam in the direction you want the ball to swing...the shiny side of the ball should be on the opposite side of the direction you want it to swing.....
keep your arm as striaight as possible during the bowling action, and keep the seam as upright as possible
2007-02-18 04:41:09
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answer #6
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answered by Cy 3
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to bowl an inswinger shine one side of the ball and when gripping the ball make sure the seam is directing towards first slip!
2007-02-18 06:29:23
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answer #7
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answered by the southern dandy 3
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