Mumbai Indians consultant Jonty Rhodes believes playing baseball can improve a cricketer's throwing and fielding abilities drastically
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Cricketers can take help from a fielding coach with a strong baseball background like Mike Young to improve their performance on the field especially throwing skills, former South Africa player Jonty Rhodes today said.u00a0
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The 42-year-old, who is the fielding coach of IPL franchise outfit Mumbai Indians, also rued that the art of throwing the ball was not taught to him as a youngster, adding it was one area where baseball can definitely help cricket.u00a0
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"I think the key with (taking the help of) baseball is throwing. I think that's one area we (cricketers) don't work on. I have tried really hard to change that. I have spoken a lot with Mike Young when I was the fielding coach of South Africa and he was coaching Australia," Rhodes told PTI here.u00a0
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Mumbai Indians' fielding coach Jonty Rhodes believes baseballu00a0can improve cricketers' fielding.
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The Chicago-born Young went to Australia in the early 1980s to continue his career as a baseball coach and also led the nation's squad to a 5th-place finish, it's best-ever then - in the Seoul Olympic Games - before Cricket Australia engaged him as a fielding coach for its squad in 2000.u00a0
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"The impact baseball can have and (the advantage) in having a guy like Mike Young (with you), is that you can improve your throwing. I think baseball can make a huge contribution to the way cricket players throw," said Rhodes.u00a0
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"That's the best way to save 3s to 2 or 2s to 1. If someone has got a strong throw, players (rival batsmen) don't take them on (while running between the wickets). That's (throwing) one area I never got coached. No technique is taught to kids (in cricket) about throwing ...if you can catch the ball and throw it's good enough.u00a0
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"And I have done a lot of work in India with Mumbai Indians and also have my own coaching academy, but the biggest downfall is the throw," said the South African, who used to mesmerise spectators with his acrobatic catching, diving stops and fleet-footedness at backward point.u00a0
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Rhodes, who took a quintet of amazing catches in an ODI against the West Indies at the Cricket Club of India here during the Hero Cup Tournament in November 1993 to earn the man of the match award, said fielding has changed dramatically from his days as a player.u00a0
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"The key (change) for me is that the specialist fielder used to be the guy fielding at backward point, covers or in the slips in a Test, but now a specialist fielder is the one who fields on the boundary, saving the fours and sixes and making sure the twos are translated down just to a single.u00a0
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"The specialist fielder (of a team) is no longer at backward point or in the covers. You can't have just two or three specialists. You got to have everybody contributing. Because the guys are playing some amazing shots and the ball goes to every part of the field," said Rhodes, who played 52 Tests for the Proteas from 1992 to 2000.u00a0
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Rhodes, who played 245 ODIs and retired after the 2003 World Cup held in his home country, said Mumbai Indians' new entrant Robin Petersen as an outstanding fielder with ambidextrous abilities which is very rare.u00a0
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"Robin Petersen is a good fielder. We are fortunate he has come to join us (MI). Petersen is one of the few players in cricket who can throw with right and left hand. He's a pretty useful guy to have in the covers. He hasn't got a weak arm, he can run too," he remarked.u00a0
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He did not think developing ambidextrous abilities like Petersen was the way forward in cricket. "No, I don't think so. It's too big an ask. I don't think it's a skill you need to work on. For me, in fielding the important part is your feet. If you have fast feet you naturally get around to the ball quicker whether you are right handed or left handed. It (ambidextrousness) is an advantage if you can do it at speed."u00a0
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Asked what precautions needed to be taken to prevent injuries while fielding, Rhodes replied "I think the one precaution you need to take is not to take precaution. "Guys who are hesitant (to dive) and hit the ground softly do more damage (to themselves) if they land on their knees or on their shoulders. If a player is running at speed and he's diving at full speed...the momentum will take him through most of the injuries."u00a0
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Rhodes said his role model as a fielder was one-time senior teammate Peter Kirsten who used to field where he later specialised in and became a legend, gully and backward point. "My role model was Peter Kirsten. In South Africa because of the sporting isolation and also because of lack of television coverage I never got to see (another SA fielding legend) Colin Bland play."