Indian cricketer Mohammed Shami raised his voice to revoke the usage of saliva for generating reverse swing, which has become minimal these days. Speaking after India's four-wicket win over Australia ...
If you've ever watched a batter get beaten by a ball that curved, jagged or dipped at the last moment, you've seen one of ...
When the power of reverse-swing was finally understood by the international cricket community - it happened in the summer of 1992 when Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis made the ball talk all over England ...
Rajasthan Royals (RR) have had their mental fortitude questioned to the extent that pundits have been criticising their decision to chase even when it is plain to see they should. This kind of message ...
It is a sight for sore eyes. A dirty, raggedy ball, hurled in fast, dipping, moving late and towards the (relatively) shiny side, shutting down some of the heavy scoring in the second half of an ODI ...
Pakistan’s masters of reverse-swinging a cricket ball have unanimously defended it as an “art” which can be achieved without the tampering that ended in shameful bans for three Australian players.
Fast bowlers are widely known to use three different methods to get the ball to swerve through the air: conventional swing, contrast swing, reverse swing. James Anderson, however, can lay claim to a ...
Pat Cummins is steaming in at the SCG to Pakistan's star batter, Babar Azam. He lets a ball rip that out of the hand is heading outside the off-stump, before it swerves dramatically in to trap Azam on ...
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