| Literature DB >> 26993134 |
David L Mann1, Oliver R Runswick2,3, Peter M Allen4.
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.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26993134 PMCID: PMC4996889 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-016-0516-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Fig. 1Cricket batting stances and their influence on achieving expertise. a Demonstration of conventional left-handed (left) and right-handed (right) batting stances. When adopting this conventional stance, the dominant hand (shown in darker shading/red) is placed lower on the handle so it is closer to the striking end of the bat. When adopting the reversed stance, a person who is right-hand dominant will adopt a left-handed stance, and a person who is left-hand dominant will adopt a right-handed stance. In the reversed stance, the hand placed further from the striking end of the bat (shown in lighter shading/grey) is the dominant hand. b Odds ratio comparing the proportion of professional and inexperienced batsmen who use a reversed or a conventional stance. Error bars show 95 % confidence intervals. c Odds ratio comparing the proportion of professional and inexperienced batsmen who bat with a dominant front or dominant back eye. Error bars show 95 % confidence intervals
Fig. 2A photograph taken during each of the three tests of eye dominance. a The right-hand front-on test, b the left-hand front-on test, and c the batting eye dominance test. All three photographs show right eye dominance
| Cricket batsmen have a surprising advantage if they adopt the stance opposite to that expected based on their handedness (i.e., if right handers bat left handed and vice versa). |
| The advantage appears to be grounded in positioning the dominant hand further from (rather than closer to) the striking end of the bat. |
| Findings suggest that cricket batsmen may inadvertently be taught to bat ‘back-to-front’. |