Bowlers aim for the "pocket." The "pocket" is the spot between the 1-3 pins if you are a right-handed bowler and the 1-2 pins if you are a left-handed bowler. Ideally, if you are a newer bowler and you throw your ball straight you would aim between the middle and the arrow directly right (if you are a right-handed bowler) or directly left (if you are a left-handed bowler). If one continues to bowl and becomes skilled enough to hook the ball then they can learn to adjust to throw at any arrow.
Your question cannot be understood, but if you are asking what is "Off Side in the game of Cricket" , the answer is: For a right handed batsman, the off side is to his right as he faces the bowler. For a left handed batsman, the off side is to his left as he faces the bowler.
From the point of view of a right-handed batsman facing the bowler, the right hand side of the cricket field (being to the bowler's left). With a left-handed batsman the off side is to the batter's left. Off side is the side they are facing.
yes ive bowled a few lefties out.
In cricket the leg break is the type of delivery which the bowler uses. This is the delivery a right handed spin bowler uses and is part of the slower bowling styles.
Yes. At the beginning of a new spell, the umpire will ask the bowler "Right-arm over?" or something similar to determine which arm he will use and which side of the wicket he will bowl from. The umpire then informs the batsman. If the bowler decides to change either of these (to bowl around the wicket or with his left arm) he must inform the umpire, who informs the batsman. If changes either without telling the umpire, the delivery is illegal and will be called a no-ball. Similarly, a batsman must tell a bowler whether he will bat right- or left-handed, and cannot change without notifying the bowler. A bowler, however, does not have to tell anyone what style he intends to bowl. There is nothing to stop a bowler from bowling a fizzing leg break, followed by a 150km/h thunderbolt, followed by an arm ball. "Which arm" and "which side" are the only things a bowler has to disclose.
The Left foot, go to this site for pictures:* http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Kennmelvin/TStyles.Htm
That area is called the 'pocket'. For a left handed bowler that curves the ball from the left side, the pocket is between the #s 1 and 2 pins. For a right handed bowler that curves the ball from the right side, the pocket is between the #s 1 and 3 pins. For a bowler of either hand that rolls the ball straight, either the 1/2 or the 1/3 pockets will do good.
A watch should go on your right hand if you are left handed, and a watch should go on your left hand if you are right handed.
If you are a right-handed bowler it is called a Brooklyn strike.
As he is a left footed , he should be right handed as well.
If you are right handed you should wear your power balance bracelet on your left nipple.