by saintal » Mon Oct 26, 2015 11:13 am
by woodublieve12 » Mon Oct 26, 2015 11:33 am
by Spargo » Mon Oct 26, 2015 11:55 am
woodublieve12 wrote:My 3 year old having nightmare and going nuts after she wakes up at midnight... Than finding out the culprit of these nightmares was a a character fro the tv show Peter rabbit. Bloody old badger Tommy Block
by MW » Mon Oct 26, 2015 12:12 pm
woodublieve12 wrote:My 3 year old having nightmare and going nuts after she wakes up at midnight... Than finding out the culprit of these nightmares was a a character fro the tv show Peter rabbit. Bloody old badger Tommy Block
by Pseudo » Mon Oct 26, 2015 12:59 pm
Spargo wrote:Lol, my youngest (almost 3) can't live without Peter Rabbit.
by Spargo » Mon Oct 26, 2015 1:05 pm
Pseudo wrote:Spargo wrote:Lol, my youngest (almost 3) can't live without Peter Rabbit.
She's an Eagles fan then?
by Lightning McQueen » Mon Oct 26, 2015 1:25 pm
helicopterking wrote:
Have you watched a U/12 match?
U/12s 6-7 of them would struggle to do it consistently . So you want them to just stand in the field for an hour and 4 kids bowl all day, that should keep them interested in the game. It's about getting them to participate. The best players should be encouraged to attempt to play a higher age bracket.
by Lightning McQueen » Mon Oct 26, 2015 1:26 pm
saintal wrote:Agree about shortening the pitch for junior matches (it is done for some of the real young kids). Not many legit balls in the U10s games I watch. Nobody wins when 2/3rds of the balls are wides.
by Lightning McQueen » Mon Oct 26, 2015 1:29 pm
heater31 wrote:I tend to agree. At that age group I didn't start to consistently hit the pitch until at least 11 years old....
Under 12's is the age group you should begin to play 'real' cricket with full length wicket and all the gear.
by Lightning McQueen » Mon Oct 26, 2015 1:35 pm
helicopterking wrote:
Have you watched a U/12 match?
U/12s 6-7 of them would struggle to do it consistently . So you want them to just stand in the field for an hour and 4 kids bowl all day, that should keep them interested in the game. It's about getting them to participate. The best players should be encouraged to attempt to play a higher age bracket.
by Spargo » Mon Oct 26, 2015 1:53 pm
Lightning McQueen wrote:Although back in my day, there was under 14's and that was it, I had to ride my pushy 45 minutes to training each week only to miss out each game.
by Lightning McQueen » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:03 pm
Spargo wrote:Lightning McQueen wrote:Although back in my day, there was under 14's and that was it, I had to ride my pushy 45 minutes to training each week only to miss out each game.
Thankyou Ted Bullpit
by helicopterking » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:10 pm
Lightning McQueen wrote:helicopterking wrote:
Have you watched a U/12 match?
U/12s 6-7 of them would struggle to do it consistently . So you want them to just stand in the field for an hour and 4 kids bowl all day, that should keep them interested in the game. It's about getting them to participate. The best players should be encouraged to attempt to play a higher age bracket.
Mate, I've coached them for the last 3 years along with representative sides for under 11's. 80% of the kids I've seen have no hassles getting the ball up the other end with either on or two bounces max, wides do become an issue with the lesser skilled 3 or 4 in the team.
Under 10's however, most of the coaches are pretty good at seeing this as a formative age group and are happy letting some of the kids bowl from the first strap after the crease line.
That is why I asked you what association have you been watching, the PDCA seems to work pretty well for the under 12 age group and I watched my first Western Suburbs match yesterday for the under 11's and it seemed ok.
I do stress to the kids in my team that they'll get two overs and I'll judge by them overs if they get anymore, I do point out every run that they concede through wides are extra runs that we have to make, I spend a lot of time on the lesser skilled players and their bowling by putting bowling discs on the ground and making sure they aim for them along with working on keeping their arm up nice and high and just focusing on where they want the ball to land.
I've coached junior cricket for the past 15 years and my aim each season is to make the gap between the best and weakest player in the team as small as possible.
by Footy Chick » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:15 pm
Gatt_Weasel wrote:if they (Walkerville) dont win the flag ill run around the block of my street naked :) you can grab a chair and enjoy the view
by HH3 » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:28 pm
Footy Chick wrote:cricket talk in the shits thread instead of the cricket forum
by heater31 » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:29 pm
Footy Chick wrote:cricket talk in the shits thread instead of the cricket forum
by Booney » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:30 pm
HH3 wrote:Footy Chick wrote:cricket talk in the shits thread instead of the cricket forum
Always gonna stick your fist into other people business....
by Booney » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:41 pm
heater31 wrote:Footy Chick wrote:cricket talk in the shits thread instead of the cricket forum
Penguins give me the shits
by valleys07 » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:41 pm
HH3 wrote:Footy Chick wrote:cricket talk in the shits thread instead of the cricket forum
Always gonna stick your fist into other people business....
by Lightning McQueen » Mon Oct 26, 2015 2:55 pm
helicopterking wrote:Lightning McQueen wrote:helicopterking wrote:
Have you watched a U/12 match?
U/12s 6-7 of them would struggle to do it consistently . So you want them to just stand in the field for an hour and 4 kids bowl all day, that should keep them interested in the game. It's about getting them to participate. The best players should be encouraged to attempt to play a higher age bracket.
Mate, I've coached them for the last 3 years along with representative sides for under 11's. 80% of the kids I've seen have no hassles getting the ball up the other end with either on or two bounces max, wides do become an issue with the lesser skilled 3 or 4 in the team.
Under 10's however, most of the coaches are pretty good at seeing this as a formative age group and are happy letting some of the kids bowl from the first strap after the crease line.
That is why I asked you what association have you been watching, the PDCA seems to work pretty well for the under 12 age group and I watched my first Western Suburbs match yesterday for the under 11's and it seemed ok.
I do stress to the kids in my team that they'll get two overs and I'll judge by them overs if they get anymore, I do point out every run that they concede through wides are extra runs that we have to make, I spend a lot of time on the lesser skilled players and their bowling by putting bowling discs on the ground and making sure they aim for them along with working on keeping their arm up nice and high and just focusing on where they want the ball to land.
I've coached junior cricket for the past 15 years and my aim each season is to make the gap between the best and weakest player in the team as small as possible.
South Central Juniors
Other games in the Under 12s comp
Reynella White 3/77(48 extras) vs Keswick 33(25 extras)
Goodwood 108(47 ex) v Goodwood 120( 30 ex)
Brighton Black 59(28ex) vs Brighton white 4/32( 16 ex)
Marion 140(49 ex) vs Edwardstown 118( 42 ex)
So a total score overall of 687.
Total Extras 285
To me, That's not acceptable.
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