Dot balls behind decline of spin: Warne
Posted on Oct 25, 2009 at 12:15 | Updated Oct 25, 2009 at 12:45 0 Comments Email Print
Warne, who is in Adelaide for a poker tournament, said the inability to set the right fields and an unhealthy preoccupation with dot-ball (no-run) bowling had placed his craft in jeopardy.
Warne is still trying to educate the next generation in a bid to revive the relevance of spin as a strike weapon, as Australia continues to seek his replacement three years after he retired.
quoted Warne, as saying.
"I’m trying to put something back into the game and have a role with Cricket Australia as an ambassador for the spin-bowling program. I go around to all the states and work with the captains and spinners about how to captain and set fields, encourage the spinners technically as well.
"We’ve got some really good spinners, but I think there’s too much concern at the moment about being economical. They want to bowl 20 overs and get 1-50 - not go for any runs. I’d much rather see 4-100. The emphasis seems to be restricting runs rather than being attacking," he said.
"The mentality and attitude needs to change - from the captains and coaches. That’s the biggest problem we’ve got, that they don’t understand the game. So the spinners have to take more responsibility to understand their own fields," Warne added.
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