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Coming up  14th March Umpiring course for all

 

Sandy Scotland will be the lead instructor for this event which will take place in the clubhouse from 7.15 pm and is open to all members. Give us a bell if you're interested. Really is a great night and good fun as well as informative

 

 

FIND BELOW A DISCIPLINE REMINDER FROM THE WEST DISTRICT WHICH WE ARE NOW PART OF :::

Can I take this opportunity of asking you to remind your junior players at the first practical opportunity of the requirement to be careful when using social media such as Twitter and Facebook.  In particular, please remind players that comments made on such platforms are not private exchanges, but are very much public.  In this regard, offensive remarks made can be considered breaches of disciplinary codes.  This applies in particular, but is not necessarily restricted, to where a junior player is also registered with the WDCU for senior cricket. 
 
The WDJCU has, this week, had to address (with the assistance of the clubs concerned) an issue arising out of unacceptable – and specifically west cricket-related – comments made on Facebook by some junior players and, as such, this reminder is hopefully relevant.
 
I’ll also put a general reminder on the west junior website.

 

 PRE SEASON ,SOON BE WITH US ,SOME STUFF FOR YOU TO CONSIDER,   NETS START 29TH JAN AT DOLLAR 1 TILL 3PM SEE YOU THERE

Every year you come across the same frustrating attitudes that stop people reaching their potential.

It all happens long before the season starts. People mess up their pre-season training and simply never recover when the weather improves.

If only they realised what they were saying and took positive action. It’s time we changed things for the better and started giving you the summer you deserve by giving you a preseason to be proud of.

These myths drive me mad, yet I hear them every preseason nets.

Let’s stamp them out once and for all.

1. You have to be a talented professional to train pre-season

Anyone can benefit from preseason training no matter how bad they are. In fact, the worse you are to start with, the more important and effective winter preparation.

Many people say to themselves that they are not good enough to bother. These people would rather fail and have the handy excuse ready; ‘what do you expect? I didn’t prepare.’

That’s fear talking.

They fear that if they failed after taking the winter seriously by training hard they would reveal their true lack of talent.

But the truth is that we always do better if we prepare better. Anything else is just rationalising our fears.

2. The International's don’t bother with pre-season

Technically, this is true. But it’s not the whole story.

English cricketers rarely have time for an off season of more than a couple of weeks. They go from summer to tour, to another tour, and back to summer. They are playing all year round and have no time for preseason.

But they are surrounded by coaching staff who know how to make the most of limited breaks they have. It’s not as good as being able to focus for four months without a match, but they make it work.

And I guarantee if they had a big block break they would be pushed hard in preseason by those coaches.

So you, with your months of winter nets to get through have no excuses.

3. All that fitness is not relevant to cricket

Doing squats and press ups in the depth of winter seems a long way from bowling and batting. It is no wonder some people still think badly of fitness training.

But a well tuned body is the foundation of good cricket.

Do this right and you will hit harder, bowl faster, last longer before technique fails under fatigue and be less likely to become injured.

Yes, fitness training will never replace a good technique, but it’s not an either-or situation. They complement each other perfectly.

4. It takes a lot of time to do pre-season properly

The more you can do the better, but you don’t need to commit your life to preseason training to get an improvement effect.

You can net once or twice a week, hit the gym two or three times and make noticeable improvements over a few months.

Everyone has more time than they think; it’s just a matter of priority. You may have higher priorities than cricket, but you can still make time to improve your skill and fitness in the winter months with careful planning and good knowledge of what works fast.

5. You need to have an expert to guide you through pre-season

Most players are not lucky enough to have access to a strength trainer and personalised coaching. If you are in that boat there is still plenty you can do without experts on hand.

 

 

4 Shortcuts to be Ready for the Cricket Season in Record Time

 

Here are some benchmarks.

1. Get strong, REALLY strong

When it comes to fitness there are many opinions and methods. Most of them work in some way or another, but the single most important thing you can do is get stronger.

Strength is the foundation of everything we do in cricket.

If you can only nail one thing in the run up to the season it has to be strength.

That means joining a gym and progressively improving your ability to lift weight with your legs and with pushing and pulling actions.

Forgo the aerobics and start lifting heavy stuff. It will pay off come summer and is less time consuming.

2. Get Balanced

Batting, bowling or fielding; one of the most common technical errors is not being balanced. If you struggled with technical problems last summer, preseason is the chance to put your balance right.

Your head position is all important as where the head leads, your body follows. So get yourself on video and see if your head is tipping you over.

If your balance is wrong, spend time in preseason working on drills to correct things.

For example as a batsman you can look to get throwdowns or bowling machine feeds from right arm round position. Look to stay open and drive the feed through mid on with a straight bat.

Bowler’s with the issue tend to lack both consistency and accuracy. Spend a few minutes at every training session ‘warming up’ by bowling in a net without a batsman to get your balance right. Use some cones and the drills here to help you.

3. Start toughening your hands

The start of the season is cold. If you want to make sure you can catch the first ball of the spring you have to start preparing your hands early.

This means taking time at every session (even indoors) to catch cricket balls.

Even a simple warm up tossing tennis balls for a few minutes, followed by cricket balls to a partner helps with getting your arm and hands back in the swing of things.

The ideal is to do some catching every day, progressively increasing the speed of the catch. By the time you get outdoors your hands should have gone through the early bruising stage and have toughed up nicely.

4. Combine elements in nets

Although net training has come on in leaps and bounds in the last 10 years, it’s still not as realistic as it could be for many players because it doesn’t incorporate running or tactical play.

 

 WINTER NETS 

  

Hi all ,dates for your diary , winter nets start at  Dollar Academy,  Jan 29 and ending Mar 25. Same time of 1pm-3pm.  Come one Come all , fitness and cricket to kickstart the season prepartions see you all there

 

 

Newsflash!

SNCL League Restructuring


Cricket Scotland have released a statement on the restructure of the SNCL.

To read this statement, please follow this link. Cricket Scotland SNCL Restructuring

 

 

 


 
Latest News
 

 

Calling all club members!


For those who would like a bit of fun in the winter months, our comrades from the hockey club have organised the following.

All welcome!


Contact RITCHIE CARSWELL for more details ; 

 

Upcoming Events

 

Saturday, 17 December 2011
Club Christmas Night Out / Race-night (Men’s 1sts)

Saturday, 17 March 2012
St Patricks Day Pub Quiz Night (Men’s 2nds)

Saturday, 28 April 2012
End of Season Award’s Night (Ladies 2nds)

 

 

 

 

 

Announcements





Saltire Teamwear Special offer for SCCC members.


Saltire have a 50% sale on with a lot of cricket bats and gloves as well as rugby boots.


All available immediately.


Visit Saltire Team wear Clearance sale


or call Eddie on:


Mob: 07857603880
Office: 01259 726691