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14 Jan 2026 23:05
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  •   Home > News > Sports > Cricket

    How cricket balls move: the science behind swing, seam and spin

    Bowlers in cricket look to challenge batters with swing, seam and spin bowling. Scientists are still learning how bowlers achieve them.

    Cody Lindsay, Lecturer, Exercise and Sport Science, Flinders University
    The Conversation


    If you’ve ever watched a batter get beaten by a ball that curved, jagged or dipped at the last moment, you’ve seen one of cricket’s great mysteries.

    Whether it’s a Mitchell Starc inswinger, a Josh Hazlewood delivery that nips off the seam, or a Nathan Lyon off-spinner turning sharply, each comes down to physics and biomechanics working together.

    Bowlers make the ball move in three ways: swing, seam and spin.

    Each challenges batters differently, and scientists are still learning how bowlers achieve them.

    Swing: when the air does the work

    Swing bowling is the sideways curve of the ball in flight.

    It’s most common for fast or medium-pace bowlers, though some spinners swing the new ball in shorter formats.

    For batters, swing is one of the hardest balls to face. Despite coaches urging them to “watch the ball”, it often curves too quickly.

    Batters rely on cues from the bowler’s action and early ball flight to predict where it will land – any deviation throws off that prediction.

    There are three main types of swing bowling: conventional, contrast and reverse swing.

    Conventional swing happens with a new, shiny ball.

    When the seam is angled slightly, it makes one side of the ball’s surface rougher than the other. As the air hits the raised seam, it becomes turbulent on that side, while the air on the other side stays smooth. The turbulent air stays attached to the ball for longer, while the smooth air on the other side separates earlier.

    This difference creates a sideways force that makes the ball swing toward the direction of the pointed seam.

    My research from 2024 shows keeping the ball’s seam upright and stable increases swing, while a wobbling seam reduces it.

    Through interviews with elite bowlers and coaches, and later filming them in separate research, I found bowlers achieve this by aligning their fingers and wrist with the seam, then running their fingers down the back on release.

    Any sideways movement of the seam “scrambles” it and kills the swing.

    As the ball ages, one side roughens while the bowling team will shine the other side so it stays smoother and shinier. This creates contrast swing, where the ball moves towards the rough side because air clings longer to the ball’s surface.

    With more wear, the rough side can become so coarse that air no longer stays attached, flipping the airflow.

    This produces reverse swing, where the ball moves towards the smoother side. Reverse swing usually appears only at very high speeds, which is why the world’s fastest bowlers generate it most consistently.

    Seam: when the bounce is unpredictable

    While swing happens through the air, seam movement occurs off the pitch – the sideways deviation caused when the seam grips the pitch surface.

    To seam the ball, fast bowlers release the ball with a slight wobble or at an angle, rather than perfectly upright. The raised seam then catches the turf and deviates slightly towards the direction of the seam.

    Because cricket pitches vary, some are better for seam movement than others.

    “Flat” wickets with short grass offer little movement. Greener pitches with more grass or moisture have small irregularities that make the ball grip and change direction.

    From the batter’s point of view, seam movement is brutal. At 130 kilometres per hour or more, they’ve already committed to their shot before the ball lands.

    Even a few centimetres of deviation can turn a good shot into an edge or a miss – this is why seam bowlers claim so many caught behind, bowled and leg before wicket (LBW) dismissals.

    Spin: making the ball dance

    Spin bowling creates movement through rotation, causing the ball to drift, dip and turn.

    Spin bowlers trade pace for revolutions, relying on sidespin and topspin to manipulate flight and bounce.

    There are two main types: finger spin (off-spin, left-arm orthodox spin) and wrist spin (leg-spin, left-arm unorthodox spin).

    Finger spinners roll their fingers across the ball, while wrist spinners use a strong flick of the wrist to generate more spin.

    A spinning ball changes the airflow around it: air speeds up on one side and slows on the other, producing sideways drift in flight.

    Adding topspin makes the ball dip, dropping sharply as it nears the batter.

    When the ball lands, friction between ball and pitch can cause it to turn sideways.

    Pitch conditions play a big role with spin bowling.

    Dry, dusty wickets common in the Indian subcontinent create more friction and turn, while harder, faster Australian pitches offer bounce but less spin.

    Variations in moisture, grass and wear also influence how much the ball grips.

    That’s why spinners constantly adjust their pace, angle and release – small tweaks that can deceive even the best batters.

    The beauty of unpredictability

    Cricket is a game of fine margins, where physics meets skill.

    Even the smallest variation – a flick of the wrist, a roughened seam or a patch of grass – can send the ball on a different path.

    That unpredictability keeps cricket fascinating – a constant contest between bowler and batter, skill and science, order and chaos.

    The Conversation

    Cody Lindsay does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2026 TheConversation, NZCity

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