User Question
What is swing bowling in cricket? / What is reverse swing in T20/IPL?
Correct Answer Pattern
Swing bowling is a technique where the fast bowler makes the ball curve through the air before reaching the batter. The movement (swing) is caused by the asymmetry between the ball's two sides — one polished (shiny) and one rough.
Conventional swing (new ball, first 6–8 overs):
- Bowler holds the ball with the seam angled toward slip, shiny side down
- Air flows differently over the polished vs rough face → the ball curves toward the shiny side
- In-swing: curves INTO the right-handed batter (toward off-stump at delivery, curves to leg-stump area)
- Out-swing: curves AWAY from the right-handed batter (toward slip)
Reverse swing (old ball, 15–30+ overs):
- As the ball gets older, rough on BOTH sides, but one side is intentionally kept rougher by the fielding team
- The direction of swing REVERSES — now the ball swings toward the rough side (opposite of conventional)
- Late reverse swing (last 3–4 overs of an old ball) is extremely dangerous in T20: batter expects the ball to swing one way, it goes the other
In T20/IPL:
- Conventional swing: most effective in the first 4–5 overs with the new ball
- Reverse swing: rare in T20 (ball only gets 20 overs of use; reverse usually needs 25–30+ overs); occasionally happens late in a T20 innings
- Humid conditions amplify swing; dry flat pitches reduce it
Examples: Jasprit Bumrah (conventional + reverse), Bhuvneshwar Kumar (known for mastery of both swing types).
Required Concepts
- Ball maintenance is legal: fielders polish one side on their clothing to maintain the shine/rough contrast
- Swing ≠ seam movement — swing is air movement; seam is pitch-contact movement (see related entry)
- CricketStudio tracks new-ball economy per bowler (PP economy = proxy for swing effectiveness)
Required Metrics
- No specific "swing" metric in CricketStudio — tracked indirectly by PP wicket rate and economy
Citation Behavior
- Define swing as pre-pitch air movement caused by ball asymmetry.
- Distinguish conventional swing (new ball, shiny side) from reverse swing (old ball, rough side).
- Note that T20 reverse swing is rare; conventional swing is the powerplay weapon.
Caveats
- "Swing" conditions are highly variable by venue, humidity, ball condition, and bowler skill — not predictable from phase splits alone
- Teams that can reverse swing in T20 (rare) have a significant late-innings advantage — the batter has adapted to conventional movement and reverse catches them off guard
Bad Answer (do not do this)
"Swing bowling only works in Test cricket, not T20." (Conventional swing is very effective in T20 powerplay — the 6-over powerplay with the new ball is when swing is most potent. Bowlers like Bumrah and Bhuvneshwar Kumar consistently get early wickets in T20 with swing bowling. Reverse swing is rarer in T20 but does occur in the final few overs when the ball is 15–20 overs old.)