Bowlers must expand skillsets to survive in T20 cricket, says Shane Bond
Former New Zealand pacer Shane Bond believes bowlers need to constantly evolve and add new variations to survive in an era of increasingly “ultra-aggressive” T20 batting, saying those who successfully expand their skillsets can emerge as “superstars” in the format.
Bond’s remarks came amid Rajasthan Royals’ continued struggles with the ball this IPL season. The Royals were hammered by Gujarat Titans on Saturday after conceding 229 runs in a crushing 77-run defeat.
It was the seventh time in 11 matches this season that Rajasthan allowed their opponents to breach the 200-run mark.Bond, the Royals’ bowling coach, admitted his side has failed to adapt well enough to familiar conditions.
“We just haven’t played well enough in conditions that we know. We’ve been outplayed by our opposition. I look at bowlers, they just have to be better, right? You’ve got to think a bit outside the box,” Bond said at the post-match press conference.
“There’s two things: decision-making and execution. I think tonight, you would have probably noticed that execution just wasn’t consistent enough for long enough. And I think if you look across the board in the IPL, that’s just been the case.”The batsmen, they’re coming out, they’re playing ultra-aggressive, and putting pressure on bowlers. So as a bowler, you’ve got to ask, well, ‘what can I do differently?'” “They have got to spend more time with the analysts knowing exactly where each batsman’s going to…the zones they’re going to score at. I may have to bowl off a shorter run and a longer run. I’ve got to be able to come around the wicket and bowl on both sides.”
In the ongoing season of the IPL, teams have been chasing 200 plus targets with relative ease. “When you see the bowlers are doing the same thing, game after game after game after game, getting the same result, then my question would be: Bond pointed out how batters have expanded their scoring arsenal, forcing bowlers to evolve at a similar rate.
“You look at batsmen now, they’re playing the uppercut, they’re reversing, they’re scooping. They’ve developed a range of shots.
“So a bowler has to develop their range of skills as well. I think it’s a great opportunity for any bowler to go: ‘if I can do that, then I can elevate myself into, you know, a lot of money and be a superstar’. I just don’t think you’ve consistently seen that across the board.”
