“…In junior cricket, Harwood, Yeadon, & King (2018a) showed that playing measures (such as the number of playable deliveries and amount of running between the wickets) and player involvement improved when under-10s and under-11s played on a 16-yard pitch (as recommended by a high-level coach) compared with 19-or 20yard pitches. Shortening the pitch encouraged top bowlers in those age groups to release the ball with a more downward trajectory (Harwood, Yeadon, & King, 2018b); on average they bowled standard deliveries at 4.2° below horizontal on 16 yards (14.63 m) compared to 0.7° below on 19 yards (17.37 m), much closer to the 7° below horizontal found for elite pace bowlers (Cork, Justham, & West, 2012;Justham, West, & Cork, 2008;Worthington, 2010). Bowling on pitches which are disproportionately long, requires young players to change the way they release the ball as they "grow into" the pitch length, something also noted by Whiteside, Elliott, Lay, & Reid (2013) in relation to tennis serving.…”