People only tend to remember how a batsman runs between the wickets when something goes wrong. Geoff Boycott running out Derek Randall, on Randalls home ground, Trent Bridge, in 1977. Allan Donald and Lance Klusener in the 1999 World Cup semi-final. Ricky Ponting and England super sub Gary Pratt in 2005. Inzamam-ul-Haq and pretty much everyone.Yes, no, wait. And then, the inevitable sorry. Unless youre the one on the way back to the pavilion.Its odd that nobody really notices the running when things are going well, considering its such a crucial part of the contest between bat and ball.Imagine fielding against two of todays better runners, say Jonny Bairstow and Joe Root, or AB de Villiers and JP Duminy. Not only have you got to watch out for booming drives and pulls, deft cuts and dabs, the odd sweep, reverse sweep and even the occasional ramp, you also have to deal with two players who can turn the strike over, keep the scoreboard ticking, score off decent balls and often even the good ones.By running well between the wickets, these players can capitalise on attacking field placings, weaker opposition fielders, or a team that has a defensive mindset. On bigger fields, good running can add to the total impressively. When boundaries are hard to come by, good running takes the pressure off. So too when a new batsman arrives at the crease.If, however, batsmen are reluctant, nervous, or worse still, fearful or negative runners, the fielding side can create its own pressure. Bowlers get one batsman to work over for a prolonged period, and the batsmen are under more pressure to hit boundaries, which can provide the bowlers with wicket-taking opportunities.Back in the 1970s, running between the wickets didnt have to be exceptional. Most fielders were cricketers rather than athletes, and even when one-day cricket started, scores of 200 could be chased down in 50 or 60 overs without taking too many risks with the running.The 1975 World Cup final marked a change. West Indies racked up 290, a pretty formidable total back then, even on a good Lords wicket. And then, when the Australian batsmen tried to pinch a few singles to keep up with the run rate, one West Indian took centre stage and showed the world that the old methods of running between the wickets were no longer sufficient against the very best fielders.The score was 81 for 1 and the non-striker, Alan Turner, was backing up a foot or so when Clive Lloyd bowled a length ball to Ian Chappell, who nudged it into the leg side and called for a run. Turner hesitated only slightly, but there was enough delay for Viv Richards to swoop in and run him out with a direct hit. Richards later also ran out both Chappells. It changed the game.Over the next few years, batsmen were more cautious when they hit one anywhere near the likes of Richards. You would get the odd scurrier, like Sussexs Paul Parker, or Middlesex and Englands Clive Radley, who had his own technique, sliding in, touching down lightly. But for most players, running between the wickets continued to be a conservative business.Dean Jones wasnt interested in any of that. When he played his first game for Victoria in 1981-82, batsmen still leaned on their bats at the non-strikers end when the ball was being delivered. Plenty who were on strike dropped defensive shots down by their feet and, job done, wandered off towards the square-leg umpire to prepare for the next delivery in their own little world.Jones wanted to run between the wickets like Richards fielded. He wanted to take the fielders on, capitalise on any error - maybe even induce a few himself.Like Kevin Pietersen, two decades later, Jones was often on the move when he played his front-foot shots, particularly in one-day cricket, where he would walk down the wicket to the seamers. He worked out that doing this gave him a headstart on the fielder. That if he made a quick-enough decision and his partner backed him up, he could be well on his way to the other end before the fielder picked the ball up.While most other players still preferred the cautious approach, reluctant to put additional risk into their batting, Jones wanted the fielder to react to what he did, rather than the other way round. That way the pressure was on the fielder to get to the ball quickly, to pick it up cleanly and to hit the stumps with a direct hit.He would drop a few at his feet and run singles and draw you in to stop the single, then he would hit one past you for a boundary, says Mike Whitney, who played with Jones for Australia and against him in domestic cricket. As a bowler, and as the fielding side, it was tough. You knew he was gonna do it but you couldnt stop it. Frustrating.Whitney says that Jones running wasnt all athleticism and competitiveness; he also had great awareness. Deano knew what hand all the fielders threw with, their strong side and weak side. He was probably the best judge of a run Ive seen. He really loved working you over in the field. Boonie [David Boon] and Swampy [Geoff] Marsh [who batted with Jones in the Australian top order] had it tough, let me tell ya.Jones had lots of tricks when it came to the actual running. Run on the pitch [to get a better grip] and run in straight lines, he says. Use the bowlers danger area to judge your turning space. Stay side-on [to the bowler] when backing up at the bowlers end, so its easier to get back. If a spinner is on, back up close to the stumps to make it harder for the bowler to field off his bowling.After running a hard two, hed take some time out by running past the wickets a long way. That gave the batsmen time to get their heart rate down to make a better decision for the next ball. If its the last ball of a limited-overs game, run as hard as you can, even if it means youre most likely run out.There have been lots of changes to the game since Jones and Richards played. Changes that on the face of it look as if they might make it easier for batsmen to run well between the wickets.Modern pitches are generally flatter, so theres less pressure on batsmen to simply survive when playing defensively. Square-of-the-wicket boundary riders tend to go out early on, creating more gaps in the infield. Bigger, better bats might create better angles for singles as the ball travels off them quicker over a shorter distance, forcing infielders to run back as well as sideways to collect the ball. Batting gear is also lighter these days, easier to run in.Former England coach Peter Moores, now with Nottinghamshire, thinks that modern trends like these tend to balance themselves out without changing the contest too much. Running between the wickets has improved, but so too has fielding, he says. Theres more pressure on batsmen to pinch singles and turn ones into twos, but in the inner circle, batters know that a direct hit runs them out. Where batsmen used to get the benefit of the doubt, now the umpires can use TV footage for close calls. So runs are turned down because of that.Theres more than one way to run well between the wickets. Of the modern-day players, Pietersen runs a bit like Jones, backing his speed and athleticism to beat the fielders. But where Pietersen would sometimes take risks to get his runs, particularly when getting off the mark, Mahela Jayawardene never seemed to be in a rush. He knew where the gaps were, always seemed to find them, and turned the strike over calmly and effortlessly. It was an intrinsic part of his batting.The best runners can judge a run, Moores says. There are others who pinch runs really well, but they take high risks. Experienced guys know when to push it, when not to. A young player might be enthusiastic, up for it, but sometimes that enthusiasm gets the better of them.Pietersen, for once, agrees with Moores. The best runners are alert to whats possible and whats not. You cant teach that. Youve either got it or you dont have it. He says that good runners have to be street-smart. They see opportunities, know what works where, when, against whom.Look at two guys in particular - Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir. Anything that touched their pad or their thigh pad, they ran. They are not the most athletic, but goodness, are they street-wise. They know that the soft impact to square leg, midwicket, off a seamer, will take a lot longer to reach the fielder. The number of singles they used to get.Graham Thorpe and Alec Stewart, who played together for Surrey and England for years, had something similar going. We both thought that if it comes off the thigh pad, or within a yard of the stumps, if you make that call early and both straight away, it can be difficult for any fielder or the wicketkeeper or bowler to get to the ball and run you out, says Thorpe. A little apprehension on the field and you can usually get through for a single. It can be done with a look rather than a call.Thorpe says that when Stewart was on strike, his bottom hand would start to come off the bat when he wanted to run, or his eyes would widen, to show his intent. Youd see a real positiveness in the first split-second of his movement.Thorpe also believes that it takes a few years of batting together to get that level of trust, and that things work better between two batsmen who have a similar approach to running. I ran well with Nasser Hussain too, although I probably didnt trust him in the first ten minutes of his innings, when hed be very edgy and keen to get off the mark. After that he was a good runner. He was always looking.Mick Newell, who was on the coaching staff when Pietersen was at Nottinghamshire, says that good runners like Pietersen have an excellent awareness of what a single looks like, and of what a two can look like if they put enough pressure on the fielder. They never assume its just a single because theres a boundary fielder there, Newell says.He adds that good running awareness should also extend to what your batting partner is capable of. You dont always have two good runners together, so you have to have an awareness of what the other person can achieve, as well as what you can achieve.Thorpe agrees. If youre a busy, ballsy runner but you know that your mate at the other end is slightly more edgy or more cautious, you shouldnt force things, he says. Thats when run-outs occur. You have to respect the other players personality.And if youre not coming, give it an early call. Dont get forced into it, particularly if youre a junior player batting with a senior player for the first time. Back your judgement as a runner.Sometimes run-outs occur when one batsman is running for two and the other isnt, or if one starts to come for a second or third run and then changes his mind without telling the other. Thorpe says that this sort of thing can be avoided in the turn, if you can see both the ball and your partner.Ideally you want to turn on your stronger side so you can push off faster, he says. But if that also happens to be your blind side, depending on where the ball has gone, you have to make a choice. Sometimes you have time to swap hands so you can see the ball. If you havent, and turn blind, within the first couple of yards after the turn you need to locate your batting partners eyes to get an indication whether youre both still going.When running goes wrong, its often the communication that goes awry. A player might be so focused on what he is doing that he fails to notice whats going on around him. Underlying poor communication is usually a lack of awareness - of where the ball is, where and who the fielder is, who your partner is, and even where your crease is.Moores explains that batsmen learn to communicate in their own way. Those who have batted together a lot will have a feel for each other, the way they run and what theyre looking for. It becomes a sort of sixth sense. They can assess each others body language to know to run before they even say yes.Mistakes come because two people try to make one decision, if they dont know each other well enough, or if both call at the same time.Often its pressure that makes things go wrong. In Klusener and Donalds case, the pressure they must have felt during a last-wicket stand in the last over of the World Cup semi-final with a place in the final, which would have been South Africas first, within their grasp. In 1977, Boycott was in his first Test after returning from two and a half years of self-imposed exile, and was keen to impose himself on the game and on the Australians and the England team. Inzamam, often Pakistans best player but never their best runner, was always out of his comfort zone when his country needed him to pinch a few singles.Pressure can lead to heightened intensity, which leads to bad decisions and bad running. Wwhen everything is on the line, not even the coolest, toughest customer always gets it right. And even if they do, their batting partner might not be quite so sure of themselves.Every so often, running between the wickets goes from being something commonplace to an enthralling, if fleeting, calamity. For the spectator and the avid follower, that really is cricket at its theatrical and memorable best. Walter Brown Celtics Jersey . Bryzgalov stopped 25 shots on Saturday in the Oklahoma City Barons 4-1 victory over the Abbotsford Heat. 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Using his superior athleticism, St-Pierre cruised to a five round, unanimous decision victory setting up a much-anticipated title defence against number one contender Johny Hendricks. What a breathtaking weekend weve all just witnessed. The week off proved costly for both Geelong and GWS as Sydney and the Western Bulldogs booked their spot in the Grand Final.Sydney flew out of the blocks against the Cats and after quarter time the game was effectively over.The second preliminary final was the polar opposite. The Giants and Dogs were locked in a heavyweight fight from the very first bounce.Sydney will be looking for their second premiership in five seasons whilst the Bulldogs will be hoping to claim their first in more than 50 years.Its the time of year weve all been waiting for and come Saturday, well have one team left standing atop the rest.HeroesClay Smith (WB)After a horror run with knee injuries, Smith could now be the X-Factor that delivers the Bulldogs their drought-breaking premiership. He was instrumental in the preliminary final with 26 disposals and four goals to fire the Dogs home for their second and most important away win this finals series.Smith dedicated his stellar performance?to a close friend who had died in the week leading up to the final. The entire Bulldogs outfit have proved theyre made of the right stuff as theyve defied all odds on their journey this season.They will be looking to ride this emotional high for 4 more quarters, coupled with the majority of neutral support in their corner, it could elevate Luke Beveridge and his men into footy folklore..Jobe WatsonIt was wonderful to see the smiling Essendon champion in such a good space announcing his return to the game.Whether the Brownlow medal remains his to keep or not, the coveted award doesnt define Watson. Having had to endure the last 4 years as the face of a playing group under fire from the supplements scandal, Watson deserves some joy in this game we all love.Sporting a cap branding Feminist in support of workplace equality, Watson gave Essendon supporters their final piece of the puzzle and the club now goes in with confidence to the 2017 season.Sydneys electric small forwardsTom Papley, Ben McGlynn and Gary Rohan provided the spark and applied incredible amounts of pressure inside forward 50 against the Cats.Much of the talk in the lead up to the AFL Grand Final will centre around Buddy Franklin and what he can do on the big stage, in what will be his fifth Grand final appearance, but the efforts of these three may just define the result.Papley has been an inspired rookiie elevation, having proven he is capable of kicking important goals or laying a team lifting tackle in the big moments.ddddddddddddMcGlynn has returned to his best after an indifferent season while Rohan was influential in the prelim just 6 days after being carted off the SCG on a stretcher.VillainsCats PassengersThe midfield maestros in Patrick Dangerfield (39 disposals), Joel Selwood (39 disposals) and Jimmy Bartel (26 disposals, 1 goal) were all terrific and led from the front but in big games you need your 22 all contributing and playing their role.Unfortunately for Geelong, Friday nights clash against Sydney highlighted a lack of midfield depth and a reliance on the stars to drag them across the line.The Cats were outhunted and outmuscled by the Swans from the opening bounce as they slammed on 7 goals in the first term that took the game away from their opponents.It was a big return to finals football this season for Geelong, however, with too much left to too few the Cats need to find a more even spread and that may start by making some tough list-management decisions in the coming off season.Jeremy CameronAfter running the Swans ragged in the semifinal, Jeremy Cameron was expected to make a big impact against the Dogs. Fletcher Roberts had his measure all night and held Cameron to just 5 disposals and no marks inside 50.Cameron failed to kick a major or make any impact in the clash at Spotless stadium that ended the Giants golden opportunity to make the big one in just their 5th year.Jonathan Patton (4 goals) and Rory Lobb (3 goals) took further steps forward and provided the Giants with a target, but Cameron needs to find a way to get involved whether thats through pressure at ground level or a better contest in the air.Statistical AnomalyWhen a side has 32 more inside 50s than their opponent, it would normally translate to scoreboard pressure and a winning result.But for Geelong the inefficiency of those entries played a major part in Sydney advancing to the Grand Final.The Cats were forced into rushed shots on goal and failed to have any meaningful, deep entries.Dane Rampe and Heath Grundy defended brilliantly and set in motion the Swans rebound out of the back half through players such as Zac Jones, thanks to their intercepts and spoils. 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