Metadata
Title
Shorter pitch lengths for junior cricket
Category
general
UUID
812309ddd7b04d50ad8ffbed3c270ec5
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/junior-cricket/
Parent URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:02:35+00:00
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Shorter pitch lengths for junior cricket

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/junior-cricket/ Parent: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/

Shortening cricket pitches to revitalise junior cricket throughout England and Wales

To date, very little research has addressed junior cricket. One aspect of junior sport which has begun to receive attention is the scaling of the playing environment.

The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) recognised that the conventional cricket pitch was disproportionately long for young players and speculated that this was detrimental to player enjoyment and technical development.

A partnership between the University and the ECB examined this hypothesis and made several recommendations which are being widely adopted with positive effects.

Our impact

ECB recommendations

Enhanced performance and enjoyment

Dissemination

ECB Recommended Junior Formats

The research

A pilot study in 2015 established that shortening the pitch – at both club under-11 and county under-10 standards – had positive effects on the performance of bowlers, batters and fielders.

Further analysis of bowler performance – across various age groups at club and county levels – revealed greater success rates and more variety in bowling during play on the shorter pitch.

Another study demonstrated that the shorter pitch improved the coupling between delivery length and appropriate shot selection. The proportion of back foot shots to short deliveries increased in all groups – significantly so for some. In county matches, there was also an increase in front foot shots to full deliveries.

The findings of these studies were used to calculate the optimum pitch lengths – rounded to whole yards – for the various age groups.

We embarked on a project with the University to find the optimum pitch length for each age group. I’m really excited about the results – if we can keep people in the game and make some technical advances that would be fantastic.

David Graveney OBE England and Wales Cricket Board

Research funders

Development partners

Meet the experts

Professor Mark King

Professor of Sports Biomechanics

Professor Fred Yeadon

Emeritus Professor of Computer Simulation in Sport