This is the way: Going around the wicket to take buckets of wickets

The India vs Australia series has seen a massive switch in the angle of attack for spinners (although it may only be temporary)

Karthik Krishnaswamy05-Mar-2023If you’re old enough to have watched cricket since the 90s (or from even earlier), a fundamental change you may have observed is how much more bowling there now is from around the wicket. Left-arm orthodox spinners always used that angle to right-hand batters, but it took other bowlers longer to catch up to the potential of that angle against the opposite-hand batter.The introduction of the DRS speeded up the rise in offspinners going around the wicket to left-hand batters. Muthiah Muralidaran and Harbhajan Singh were late adopters, while Graeme Swann and R Ashwin used it as their default option as soon as they arrived in Test cricket. More recently, right-arm fast bowlers have been bowling a significantly bigger chunk of their overs to left-hand batters from around the wicket, as this piece notes.Over the last month, the spinners bowling in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy have written a new chapter in this tale. They’ve bowled predominantly from around the wicket not just to the opposite-hand batter but to the same-hand batter as well. Ashwin, Nathan Lyon and Todd Murphy have bowled around the wicket to right-handers almost as a rule, as have Ravindra Jadeja, Axar Patel and Matt Kuhnemann to left-handers.The last time the Border-Gavaskar Trophy was played in India, six years ago, fingerspinners went around the wicket for only 20% of their balls against same-hand batters. In the first three Tests of the ongoing series, that figure has shot up to 73%.