Should you ditch the bowling machine? The hidden cost of "convenient" practice
What if the tools coaches rely on most are actually making athletes worse?
In this roundup episode, Martyn, Keith, and Ian unpack a deceptively simple problem, getting young cricketers enough quality ball-facing time, and follow the thread all the way from 13-year-olds in the nets to Jannik Sinner's warm-up routine at the Melbourne Open.
Along the way they tackle some big questions: Why did Tim Paine's batting explode the moment he stopped using the dog stick? What does an elite football team failing to string a single pass together tell us about warm-ups? And could a "skilled feeder" be the next big role in sports science support?
Plus: why windy conditions might be your best training partner, the backyard game that quietly builds pressure-handling skills, and a teaser for the team's most ambitious project yet, a deep dive into skill adaptation and why it might be time to retire the term "skill acquisition" for good.
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