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Published in: Sports Medicine 9/2016

Open Access 01-09-2016 | Original Research Article

Hand and Eye Dominance in Sport: Are Cricket Batters Taught to Bat Back-to-Front?

Authors: David L. Mann, Oliver R. Runswick, Peter M. Allen

Published in: Sports Medicine | Issue 9/2016

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Abstract

Background

When first learning to bimanually use a tool to hit a target (e.g., when chopping wood or hitting a golf ball), most people assume a stance that is dictated by their dominant hand. By convention, this means that a ‘right-handed’ or ‘left-handed’ stance that places the dominant hand closer to the striking end of the tool is adopted in many sports.

Objective

The aim of this study was to investigate whether the conventional stance used for bimanual hitting provides the best chance of developing expertise in that task.

Methods

Our study included 43 professional (international/first-class) and 93 inexperienced (<5 years’ experience) cricket batsmen. We determined their batting stance (plus hand and eye dominance) to compare the proportion of batters who adopted a reversed stance when batting (that is, the opposite stance to that expected based on their handedness).

Results

We found that cricket batsmen who adopted a reversed stance had a stunning advantage, with professional batsmen 7.1 times more likely to adopt a reversed stance than inexperienced batsmen, independent of whether they batted right or left handed or the position of their dominant eye.

Conclusion

Findings imply that batsmen who adopt a conventional stance may inadvertently be batting ‘back-to-front’ and have a significant disadvantage in the game. Moreover, the results may generalize more widely, bringing into question the way in which other bimanual sporting actions are taught and performed.
Footnotes
1
We are not aware of any cases of cricketers who throw with one hand yet bowl with the other.
 
2
We expect that the higher proportion of reversed-stance left-handed batsmen in our sample is a result of chance, although participants in our sample were largely playing in the English first-class competition, and therefore may not provide as even a representation of the international playing community as our two additional groups. A country- or cultural-specific bias could underpin the difference.
 
3
We sourced the list of top ten currently active batsmen, along with their playing stance and throwing arm, from the official MLB website (http://​www.​mlb.​com; retrieved 30 Jan 2016). We searched Google for images of each player signing autographs to establish the writing hand (e.g., “Ichiro Suzuki signing autographs”). All ten batsmen throw right handed: four bat left handed, five right handed, and one both right and left handed.
 
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Metadata
Title
Hand and Eye Dominance in Sport: Are Cricket Batters Taught to Bat Back-to-Front?
Authors
David L. Mann
Oliver R. Runswick
Peter M. Allen
Publication date
01-09-2016
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Sports Medicine / Issue 9/2016
Print ISSN: 0112-1642
Electronic ISSN: 1179-2035
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40279-016-0516-y

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