Why CoachMe’s Online Cricket Academy Is Designed for the Next Generation of Cricketers
A young batter can face 200 balls in the nets and still not know what actually changed. Because the issue is not practice volume. It’s feedback timing. When correction comes late, or not at all, repetition stops being useful. It becomes reinforcement of the same mistake. This is where most cricket training systems quietly break down. They are built around sessions, not feedback loops. The player practices for a set time period as he receives intermittent feedback, and he is expected to show progress between training sessions without any established training techniques. The distance between performing an action and making a correction exceeds acceptable limits, which leads to a gradual impediment to progress over time. People often mistake repetitive activities for consistent work because they do not understand the need for proper guidance. Cricket development depends on more than just the efforts that players put into their training. The process requires both precise ti...