2017
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2017.1389484
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The relationships between impact location and post-impact ball speed, bat torsion, and ball direction in cricket batting

Abstract: Three-dimensional kinematic data of bat and ball were recorded for 239 individual shots performed by twenty batsmen ranging from club to international standard. The impact location of the ball on the bat face was determined and assessed against the resultant instantaneous post-impact ball speed and measures of post-impact bat torsion and ball direction. Significant negative linear relationships were found between post-impact ball speed and the absolute distance of impact from the midline medio-laterally and sw… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The combined importance of impact location in the medio-lateral and longitudinal directions, together explaining 43.1% of the variation in ball launch speed, suggests that players who are consistently able to impact the ball close to the sweetspot of the bat are more likely to be successful than those who generate higher bat speeds without the required accuracy. This supports previous research in cricket (Symes, 2006;Bower, 2012;Peploe et al, 2018) and tennis (Elliott et al, 1980), indicating that off-centre impacts cause significant reductions in post-impact ball speed. However, for those players able to consistently generate impacts near the sweetspot, such as the elite batsmen included in this study, increasing bat speed at the point of impact becomes vital in producing higher ball launch speeds.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…The combined importance of impact location in the medio-lateral and longitudinal directions, together explaining 43.1% of the variation in ball launch speed, suggests that players who are consistently able to impact the ball close to the sweetspot of the bat are more likely to be successful than those who generate higher bat speeds without the required accuracy. This supports previous research in cricket (Symes, 2006;Bower, 2012;Peploe et al, 2018) and tennis (Elliott et al, 1980), indicating that off-centre impacts cause significant reductions in post-impact ball speed. However, for those players able to consistently generate impacts near the sweetspot, such as the elite batsmen included in this study, increasing bat speed at the point of impact becomes vital in producing higher ball launch speeds.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…A second forward stepwise linear regression incorporating the same trials was then conducted to explain the variation in vertical ball launch angle, although the resulting model (containing bat angle about the global medio-lateral axis and impact location in the medio-lateral direction of the bat) did not meet the assumption of normal standardised residuals. As such a third forward stepwise linear regression was conducted and presented, incorporating only those trials with impacts occurring within 2 cm of the midline of the bat (n = 99; representing the 'sweet region' in the medio-lateral direction; Peploe et al, 2018). This was intended to remove any effect caused by off-centre impacts and isolate the influence of other bat-ball impact and launch parameters.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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