A revolution is occurring in cricket, and it's high time coaches took heed of it.
Cricket has always been regarded as a two-handed game, but all the manuals insist on placing the stronger hand at the bottom of the willow. The mood, however, is changing, feels noted cricket columnist Peter Roebuck.
He feels that before long coaches will pause to reconsider and keep an open mind on the topic of which hand to bat with -- right or left. All the evidence indicates that, as far as cricket is concerned, switchovers enjoy an advantage, Roebuck adds.
In an article for the Sydney Morning Herald, he cites any number of examples of right-handers preferring to bat left-handed.
There is Australian middle-order bat Michael Hussey for instance.
Michael was pictured batting right-handed on a concrete driveway. It was a reminder that he did not change tack until his ninth year, and then not by inclination, but as a tribute to Allan Border.
Hussey made the grade precisely because he stumbled upon a better method. His reasons were personal, his practice was widespread and increasingly popular.
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