well u actually have to hold ur fingers in a particular angle on the seam of the ball. To swing the ball into the wickets hold your middle and index finger across the seam and angle the ball into leg slip.
This can only be done with the help of the shiny side and with loads of practice.
it swings away from the shiny side
I believe that spin is exerted on to the ball by the hand, swing is how the ball moves in the air and turn is what the ball does off the pitch. If you're asking about cricket.
To outswing a cricket ball. Hold the ball with its seam inclined marginally towards the slip quadron. Keep the shiny side of the ball inside. With this arrangement and very normal speed around 130-135 kph, you can get the ball swing away conventionally.
by bowling a new ball in dream,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Outswing Means Swinging Away From The Batsman. The Ball Will "Spin" in The Air (Swing) From The LegSide To The Offside.
Normal swing occurs mostly when the ball is new. As it wears more, it is more difficult to extract a large amount of swing. When the ball becomes very old it begins to swing towards the shine. This is known as reverse swing- which means a natural outswinger will become an inswinger and conversely, an inswinger into an outswinger.
the heiver the bat the harder it is to swing and hit the ball so a lighter bat will have more speed and power
Reverse swing in an exact opposite of conventional cricket ball swing. It normally occurs when the ball gets a little old. Depending on weather conditions, pitch nature and environment around, the ball normally starts getting old after 20 to 25 overs. In Australia and South Africa, the ball normally starts reverse swinging around 40 to 45 overs. While the ball starts getting old, players on the ground (especially bowlers) try desperately to keep the shine on one side of the ball while the other side of the ball keeps getting rougher. Once there is a significant difference of shine and roughness on both sides of the ball, the ball starts swinging towards the shiny side. This is called reverse swing, however, it is not natural and the bowlers have to really work hard to deliver reverse swing. When the ball becomes very old - around 40 or more overs old - it begins to swing towards the shine. This is known as reverse swing- which means a natural outswinger will become an inswinger and conversely, an inswinger into an outswinger.
It is because of the air friction. To make a ball swing one side is shined up and made smooth while the other side is left to be scuffed by the pitch and what not. When the ball travells through the air the shined side goes faster as there is less air resistance this causes the ball to swing to a side.
A yorker ball hits the cricket pitch around the batsman's feet. When a batsman assumes a normal stance this generally means that the cricket ball bounces on the cricket pitch on or near the batsman's popping crease. A batsman who advances down the wicket to strike the ball (typically to slower or spin bowlers) may by so advancing cause the ball to pitch (or land) at or around their feet and may thus cause themselves to be "yorked".
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