The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)
How Royals took a leaf out of baseball to power their six-hitters
To stay ahead of the curve, RR have picked brains of those who have helped increase number of home runs in the American sport
SINCE THE IPL became a 10-team format two seasons ago, Rajasthan Royals have slammed 351sixes—thethirdmost.thegame-changer here is this number; nearly 29 percent of RR'S entire tally of sixes since 2008. Some of Rajasthan's brightest stars immediately impressed the in-house scouts by hitting sixes during trials over the years. A young Sanju Samson's standout shot was a straight six to a back-of-the-length ball, Riyan Parag's six was over mid-wicket, Dhruv Jurel went over extra cover, Yashasvi Jaiswal's ramp shot almost went all the way.
But Rajasthan Royals kept their big-hitters up to date with the batting evolution in T20 cricket.theywerequicktolearnfrombaseball, using data and research to stay ahead of the curve.
"That one shot made us love what we saw from them. And it was inevitably a six," Zubin Bharucha, the head of high performance at Rajasthan Royals, explains. “All of them came with a certain six-hitting ability."
Sunrisershyderabadhaveresetthebatting template with record-breaking totals this season, while Rajasthan have shown glimpses of whattheyarecapableofonagoodday.inapril, RR chased down 224 against Kolkata Knight Riders,thejointhighestsuccessfulchaseinthe Iplbeforepunjabkingsbettereditbygunning down 262, also against KKR, 10 days later.
Bharuchasaidtheemphasisonhittingone extra boundary than the opposition was popularised about six years ago.
“That's when we got on the bandwagon aboutwhat'shappening inbaseball.whyarethey hitting the ball further? So a lot of the protocols that we adopted came partly from baseball and partly from our understanding of how you use the mechanics of the swing to hit the ball further. The bat swing is related to how your eye picks up the ball and the time from when the ballisreleasedtowhenyouplay.a15-year-old Sanju Samson had the same swing as he does today. What we have changed is the width of that swing — how far it is from the body, the
A 15-year-old Sanju Samson had the same swing as he does today. What we have changed is the width of that swing — how far it is from the body, the way the elbows are set up, baseball stuff, and all that” ZUBIN BHARUCHA
RR HEAD OF HIGH PERFORMANCE
waytheelbowsaresetup,baseballstuff,andall that,” Bharucha elaborated.
To pick up elements from baseball, Bharucha even had all-rounder Ravichandran Ashwin travel to the USA. Hitting the ball upwards instead of flat was a key takeaway.
“We took Ashwin to Seattletoexplainbaseball mechanics,bothinbatting and bowling, with a company called Driveline Baseball. They are the guys who created a revolution in baseball where theywereabletoincrease the home runs by 50 per cent. What their research said was that in baseball, they were always hitting it flat. These guys used high technology literally in a garage and proved that it was wrong, and you hit upwards on the ball.”
Rrhasencouragedtheirbatsmentoexperimentwithheavybats,lightbatsandalsohave been innovative with batting drills.
For instance, Bharucha says their lead battersalsoworkonbatting on the outfield to improvetheirsix-hitting against spin. “It’s much tougher to hit the ball on the outfield. So we have bowlers bowling from 10 feet, 15 feet, etc... into the rough, and all these guys, Sanju, Riyan, Yash (Jaiswal), and Dhruv, are alltryingtohitsixesfrom there. A lot of these mechanisms were introducedtotheseguysoverthelastfewyears,and you are seeing the difference now.”
Bharucha says their batsmen have been constantly evolving by targeting areas of the
We have bowlers bowling from 10 feet, 15 feet, etc... into the rough, and all these guys, Sanju, Riyan, Yash and Dhruv, are all trying to hit sixes. These mechanisms were introduced over the last years, and you are seeing the difference now.” ZUBIN BHARUCHA
ON IMPROVING SIX-HITTING VS SPIN
field with more power and timing.
“Where Sanju has improved is how he accesses the ball over longoff, over wide cover, midon, and mid-wicket. One part of that access point is the width of the swing, which determines how far the elbow is from the body. When you pick the bat up, you get a wider arc fromwhichyouswingthe bat.whileotherguysmay be able to play that ball to say mid-off, he may be able to hit the same ball to cover mid-off and hit it straight. The same principles and protocols are applied to each of these players,” Bharucha explained.
Bharuchahasalreadysettheballrollingfor theradicalchangesthegamemaywitnessover the next ten years. Integral to this has been the
essence of power-hitting, which even upgraded a 38-year-old Dravid’s power game in his final few IPL seasons with Rajasthan.
“There is a lag to the swing. The hips move first, and the body follows. It is like a golf swing where you generate power. Rahul Dravid is a classic example. Right at the end of his career, when he came to us, he started slogging and hitting big sixes over long-on and mid-wicket. That’s a great example of somebody who’s never played that shot before coming into the Royals and learning that stuff.”
What is in the offing over the next few years?
The top six of a batting order striking at a 150-plus strike rate every game, believes Bharucha.“withtwofieldersoutsidethecircle, you should be scoring 65-70 runs every powerplay. You can’t suddenly say you’re going to score50orwhatever.it’sjustnotgoodenough. Ifyouhavesixplayers,allofthemneedtogoat a 150-strike rate. That’s your template for the future. That’s where we are trying to stack up players who go at that clip. It’s not easy, but that’s the vision. That is the future.”
Learning and unlearning have been integral to Bharucha and the Royals, who are gunning for their first title in 16 years.
Hetalksabouthowbattingphilosophyhas changed since a decade ago.
"We have to go 10 years back to the Rahul Dravid era. As data started coming on board, weengagedwithcricket-21(ananalyticscompany)fromchennaibackintheday.intheearly stagesofthatevolutionofdata,itwouldthrow out things like, ‘It’s better to be 45 for no loss in the powerplay rather than 60 for 2.’ That’s where we went and acquired Dravid back in the day. So you had a situation where you wanted to hit the ball along the ground, whereas RCB had Chris Gayle, and they were gettingto65butusedtolosethreewicketsand ended up losing, for example. We started with 45fornoloss.nowwearetalkingabout65–70 in the PP. We are talking about the power game."