The increased investment in some countries has meant that some women’s teams are now fully professional and their cricketers can spend more time training and honing their skills. They are also likely to have better facilities to train at, and their teams can employ specialist batting coaches and full-time strength-and-conditioning coaches, who work on creating what Keightley called «strong, robust athletes», for whom the development of a skill like power-hitting is the next logical step.The legs, hips and core are the engine of power-hitting, so players’ gym workouts need to focus on those and not just the upper body. «I like to carry weights in the gym, I like to work on my fitness because as a power-hitter, I have to be in shape,» says Ayesha Naseem, the 18-year-old Pakistan batter who slammed an 83-metre six against Australia. «On off days, I work on my base — my legs. If they are strong and stable, I can hit more sixes and they go at a distance.»Also included in these workouts are plyometric exercises — explosive movements that are aimed at developing speed and power. These include box jumps (standing on the ground and jumping with both feet onto a raised box) and knee-ups (jumping up to stand from a squat position), which aim to develop leg strength.Batters also train to create muscle memory of the sensation of hitting the ball. «To hit big, you’ve got to have some sessions where you take the shackles off and get what it feels like when I want to go for my six,» Keightley says.Du Preez calls it a «round-the-world middle-practice» where batters hit the ball all around the field from a centre pitch to see which areas they can target best. «In the nets it can feel good, but a lot of the time, it doesn’t actually clear the rope.»Even junior players are regularly training to power-hit. «Every alternate week or day, the players have hitting sessions with their coaches,» says Tanuja Lele, a BCCI strength-and-conditioning coach, who most recently worked with India’s World Cup-winning Under-19 squad.»Every single person needs to be able to hit in T20. It is expected that even if you play two balls, you can hit a six — that’s a skill that’s required,» says BCCI strength and condition coach Tanuja Lele•Getty Images»We work on the power and the rotation aspect: hip rotation, trunk rotation, along with the strength aspect of upper body and lower body, and we combine it with the skills. We try to plan it in a way where players are used to hitting it and simultaneously the strength work in the gym is being used in hitting time. We see the building of strength along with the translation of it. And we combine that with plyometrics exercises, where you end up having strength to move into the power zone.»And it’s paying off. At the time of writing, 136 sixes had been hit in 18 WPL matches so far, more than seven sixes a match. With boundaries set at a maximum of 60 metres, there have also been four totals over 200, all successfully defended. (The reasons for the high scoring have been explored -the quality of the bowling is one.)Openers Sophie Devine and Shafali Verma lead the list of six-hitters in the WPL, followed by Ellyse Perry, who bats at No. 3 for Royal Challengers Bangalore, and UP Warriorz finisher Grace Harris, proving Lele’s point that power-hitters need to be available throughout the batting line-up.»Before it used to be only one or two players who could come and hit, but now we have players like Shafali and Richa Ghosh, and you see the different skill sets. One is an opener; one is a finisher. Every single person needs to be able to hit in T20. It is expected that even if you play two balls, you can hit a six — that’s a skill that’s required.»Just ask Mignon du Preez.

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