Vertical-bat strokes Vertical-bat or straight-bat shots can be played off either the front foot or the back foot depending upon the anticipated height of the ball at the moment it reaches the batter. The characteristic position of the bat is a vertical alignment at the point of contact. Vertical-bat shots are typically played with the batter's head directly above the point of contact so they are able to accurately judge the line of the ball. At this point, the bat can either be stationary and facing straight back down the wicket – known as a block or defensive shot; angled to one side – known as a glance or deflection; or travelling forwards towards the bowler – known as a drive.
Defensive shot ) blocks the ball with a
forward defensive shot. A
block stroke is usually a purely defensive stroke designed to stop the ball from hitting the wicket or the batter's body. This shot has no strength behind it and is usually played with a light or "soft" grip (commentators often refer to "soft hands") and merely stops the ball moving towards the wicket. A block played on the front foot is known as a
forward defensive, while that played on the back foot is known as a
backward defensive. These strokes may be used to score runs, by manipulating the block to move the ball into vacant portions of the infield, in which case a block becomes a "push". Pushing the ball is one of the more common ways batters manipulate the strike. Leaving and blocking are employed much more often in
first-class cricket (including
Test matches), as there is no requirement to score runs as quickly as possible, thus allowing the batter to choose which deliveries to play. A
leg glance is a delicate straight-batted shot played at a ball aimed slightly on the leg side, using the bat to flick the ball as it passes the batter, and requiring some wrist work as well, deflecting towards the square leg or fine leg area. The stroke involves deflecting the bat-face towards the leg side at the last moment, head and body moving inside the line of the ball. This shot is played "off the toes, shins or hip". It is played off the front foot if the ball is pitched up at the toes or shin of the batter, or off the back foot if the ball bounces at waist/hip height to the batter. Although the opposite term
off glance is not employed within cricket, the concept of angling the bat face towards the offside to deflect the ball away from the wicket for the purpose of scoring runs through the off side is a commonly used technique. This would commonly be described instead as "running (or steering) the ball down to the third man".
Leave The
leave is sometimes considered a cricket shot, even though the batter physically does not play at or interfere with the ball as it passes them. The leave is often used by a batter during the first few balls they receives, to give them time to judge the conditions of the pitch and the bowling before attempting to play a shot. Leaving a delivery is a matter of judgement and technique. The batter still has to watch the ball closely to ensure that it will not hit them or the wicket; they also have to ensure that their bat and hands are kept out of the path of the ball so that it cannot make accidental contact and possibly lead to them being out
caught. Batters only leave the ball when they are certain that it will not hit the stumps.
Straight Drive plays an
off drive off the front foot. Note her stance and position of her hands, legs, body and head. A
drive is a straight-batted shot, played by swinging the bat in a vertical arc through the
line of the ball, hitting the ball in front of the batter along the ground. It is one of the most common shots in a batter's armory and often the first shot taught to junior cricketers. Depending on the direction the ball travels, a drive can be a
cover drive (struck towards the
cover fielding position), an
off drive (towards mid-off),
straight drive (straight past the bowler),
on drive (between stumps and mid-on) or
square drive (towards point). A drive can also be played towards midwicket, although the phrase "midwicket drive" is not in common usage. Drives can be played both off the front and the back foot, but back-foot drives are harder to force through the line of the ball. Although most drives are deliberately struck along the ground to reduce the risk of being dismissed caught, a batter may decide to play a
lofted drive to hit the ball over the infielders and potentially even over the boundary for six.
Flick A
flick shot is a shot played on the leg side by flicking a full-length delivery using the wrists. The shot is played with the bat coming through straight as for the on drive, but the bat face is angled towards the leg side. It can be played both off the front foot or the back foot, either off the toes or from the hips. The shot is played between the mid-on and square leg region. Typically played along the ground, the flick can also be played by lofting the ball over the infield.
Horizontal-bat shots The second class of cricket stroke comprises the horizontal-bat shots, also known as cross-bat shots: the cut, the square drive, the pull, the hook, and the sweep. Typically, horizontal bat shots have a greater probability of failing to make contact with the ball than vertical bat shots and therefore are restricted to deliveries that are not threatening to hit the stumps, either by dint of being too wide or too short. The bat is swung in a horizontal arc, with the batter's head typically not being perfectly in line with the ball at the point of contact.
Cut A
cut is a cross-batted shot played at a short-pitched ball, placing it wide on the off side. The batter makes contact with the ball as it draws alongside or passes them and therefore requires virtually no effort on their part as they use the bowler's pace to divert the ball. A
square cut is a shot hit into the off side at near to 90 degrees from the wicket (towards point). A
late cut is played as or after the ball passes the batter's body and is hit towards the third man position. The cut shot is typically played off the back foot but is also sometimes played off the front foot against slower bowling. The cut should be played with the face of the bat rolling over the ball to face the ground thus pushing the ball downwards. A mistimed cut with an open-faced bat (with the face of the bat facing the bowler) will generally lead to the ball rising in the air, giving a chance for the batter to be caught.
Square drive Although confusingly named a drive, the square drive is actually a horizontal bat shot, with identical arm mechanics to that of the square cut. The difference between the cut and the square drive is the height of the ball at contact: the cut is played to a ball bouncing waist high or above with the batting batter standing tall, whereas the square drive is played to a wide ball of shin height with the batter bending their knees and crouching low to make contact.
Pull and hook playing a
pull shot A
pull is a cross-batted shot played to a ball bouncing around waist height by swinging the bat in a horizontal arc in front of the body,
pulling it around to the leg side towards mid-wicket or square leg. The term
hook shot is used when the shot is played against a ball
bouncing at or above chest high to the batter, the batter thus "hooking" the ball around behind square leg, either along the ground or in the air. Pull and hook shots can be played off the front or back foot, with the back foot being more typical.
Sweep A
sweep is a cross-batted front foot shot played to a low bouncing ball, usually from a slow
bowler (However, players like
Mal Loye also play the sweep against fast bowlers), by kneeling on one knee, bringing the head down in line with the ball and swinging the bat around in a horizontal arc near the
pitch as the ball arrives,
sweeping it around to the leg side, typically towards square leg or fine leg. A
paddle sweep shot is a sweep shot in which the ball is deflected towards fine leg with a stationary or near-stationary bat extended horizontally towards the bowler, whereas the hard sweep shot is played towards square leg with the bat swung firmly in a horizontal arc. Typically the sweep shot will be played to a legside delivery, but it is also possible for a batter to sweep the ball to the leg side from outside off stump. Attempting to sweep a full straight delivery on the stumps is generally not recommended because of the risk of
lbw.
Unorthodox strokeplay Since a batter is free to play any shot to any type of delivery as they wish, the above list is by no means a complete list of the strokes that batters choose to play. Many unorthodox, typically high-risk, shots have been used throughout the history of the game. The advent of
limited overs cricket has seen the increased use of unorthodox shots to hit the ball into gaps where there are no fielders placed. Unorthodox shots are rarely used in
first-class cricket as the pace of the game is slower and it is relatively more important to keep one's wicket than to try to score runs off every ball. A few unorthodox shots have gained enough popularity or notoriety to have been given their own names and entered common usage.
Reverse sweep A reverse sweep is a cross-batted sweep shot played in the opposite direction to the standard sweep, thus instead of sweeping the ball to the leg side, it is swept to the off side, towards a
backward point or
third man. The batter may also swap their hands on the bat handle to make the stroke easier to execute. The batter may also bring their back foot to the front, therefore, turning the shot into a switch-hit and making it more like a traditional sweep. The advantage of a reverse sweep is that it effectively reverses the fielding positions and thus is very difficult to set a field to. It is also a risky shot for the batter as it increases the chance of
lbw and also is quite easy to
top edge to a fielder. It was first regularly played in the 1970s by the Pakistani batter
Mushtaq Mohammad, though Mushtaq's brother
Hanif Mohammad is sometimes credited as the inventor. Cricket coach
Bob Woolmer has been credited with popularising the stroke. The most famous example of a reverse sweep backfiring was in the case of
Mike Gatting of England against
Allan Border of Australia in the
1987 Cricket World Cup Final. With England on course for victory, Gatting attempted a reverse sweep off the first delivery bowled by Border, top-edged the ball and was caught by wicketkeeper Greg Dyer. England subsequently lost momentum and eventually lost the match. Because of the unorthodox nature of hand and body position, it is often difficult to get a lot of power behind a reverse sweep; in many situations, the intention is to glance or cut the ball to the back leg area. However, on rare occasions, players have been able to execute reverse sweeps for a six.
Kevin Pietersen, who pioneered switch-hitting, is adept at this, but one could argue that the resulting shot is basically a sweep rather than a reverse sweep. A more classic example of such a shot would be
Yusuf Pathan's six off
Robin Peterson. South Africa's
AB de Villiers is well known for his ability to hit sixes with the reverse sweep at ease and
Glenn Maxwell also often plays the reverse sweep.
Slog and slog sweep A
slog is a powerful pull shot played over mid-wicket, usually, hit in the air in an attempt to score a
six. A shot would be referred to as a slog when it is typically played at a delivery that would not ordinarily be pulled. A slog can also be described as hitting the ball to "
cow corner". This phrase is designed to imply that the batter is unsophisticated in their
stroke play and technique by suggesting they would be more at home playing on more rudimentary cricket fields in which there may be cows grazing along the boundary edge. The slog can be an effective shot because all the batter's power and body weight can be put into swinging the bat at the ball. A
slog sweep is a slog played from the kneeling position used to sweep. Slog sweeps are usually directed over square-leg rather than to mid-wicket. It is almost exclusively used against reasonably full-pitched balls from slow bowlers, as only then does the batter have time to sight the length and adopt the kneeling position required for the slog sweep. The front leg of the shot is usually placed wider outside leg stump to allow for a full swing of the bat.
Upper cut An
upper cut is a shot played towards
third man, usually hit when the ball is pitched outside the
off stump with extra bounce. It is a dangerous shot which can
edge the ball to keeper or slips if not executed correctly. The shot is widely used in modern cricket. The shot is advantageous on fast bouncy tracks and is seen commonly in
Twenty20 cricket. Notable players who used the upper cut include
Sachin Tendulkar,
Virender Sehwag and
Brendan Taylor.
Switch hit A
switch hit is a shot where a batter changes their
handedness and posture to adopt a stance the mirror image of their traditional handedness while the bowler is running in to bowl. As a fielding team cannot manoeuvre fielders while the bowler is in their run-up, the fielding side is effectively wrong-footed with the fielders out of position. The shot was pioneered by
Kevin Pietersen, first performed off the bowling of
Muttiah Muralitharan in England's 2006 home series against Sri Lanka. It was subsequently used in the New Zealand series in England in 2008 when Pietersen performed the shot twice in the same over against
Scott Styris on his way to making an unbeaten century.
David Warner, the Australian opener, is also a frequent user of the switch hit and used it to great effect against the Indian off-spinner
Ravichandran Ashwin in the first
Twenty20 of the Indian cricket team's tour to Australia 2012.
Glenn Maxwell and
Ben Stokes also play the switch hit. The legality of the switch hit was questioned when first introduced but cleared by the
International Cricket Council as legal. The shot is risky because a batter is less proficient in the other handedness and is more likely to make a mistake in the execution of the shot.
Scoop / ramp A
scoop shot has been used by a number of first-class players. It is played to short-pitched straight balls that would traditionally be defended or, more aggressively, pulled to the leg side. To play a scoop shot, the batter is on the front foot and aims to get beneath the bounce of the ball and hit it directly behind the stumps, up and over the wicket-keeper. This shot, though risky in the execution, has the advantage of being aimed at a section of the field where a fielder is rarely placed – particularly in
Twenty20 and
One Day International cricket where the number of outfielders is limited. However, the Marillier shot is played over the batter's shoulder to fine leg, but the basis of the scoop stroke is for the batter to go down on one knee to a good length or slightly short-of-length delivery off a fast or medium paced bowler and scoop the ball over the head of the wicket-keeper. The scoop shot is a risky shot to play as the improper execution of this shot may lead to a catch being offered. A version of the scoop stroke called the
Dilscoop was developed by Sri Lankan right-handed batter
Tillakaratne Dilshan during the
2009 ICC World Twenty20.
Helicopter shot The
helicopter shot is the act of hitting the
ball by means of a wristy flick, using the bottom-hand as the dominant force. The shot gets its name from the flourish completing the stroke, with the
bat being circled overhead. It has been considered an unconventional and innovative stroke which, when hit executed effectively, can be used to score boundaries, even against good
yorkers or fuller-length deliveries, which have traditionally been used by faster bowlers towards the end of limited-overs matches because it is difficult to hit such balls to the boundary. The shot got its fame through
MS Dhoni, who played it on a regular basis as a way to score boundaries against full and yorker length deliveries.
French cut The
French cut is a stroke where the ball is hit with the inside edge of the bat, meaning it is directed between the batter and the stumps, and moves away in the direction of the fine leg fielding position. The stroke is very difficult to play intentionally, and is more often a mistake by the batter. It is a risky stroke, and can easily result in the batter
playing on to their stumps, resulting in the batter being dismissed as
bowled. ==Strategy of batting==