You can learn all the posts on the ground and be anonymous in the world right now. I have trained young bowlers who could turn a ball like magic, but no one knew their name outside the ground. That is the way it is now—cricket is not rules and procedures when you play. It’s being present on the ground and on TV.

Start with the basics, obviously. Master the grip, the stance, and the footwork. Familiarize yourself with the field settings, the DRS rules, the LBWs. But the plus point is recording it all. Even a simple video of your frontline defense can be your virtual calling card. It’s that authentic, raw material that people scroll through.

Your Cricket Isn’t Private—So Make It Public

I believed posting training clips was a waste of time. Until one of my players below the age of 19 got an invitation to a regional camp after a scout had seen his YouTube clip.

While you practice playing cricket, learn to showcase your cricket too. Invest in a camera (or a tripod and a phone) and shoot your nets, toss practice, and gym sessions. Leave them raw—don’t over-edit them. And if you want to increase your followers by up to %37, make the clip short and the caption punchier.

Hashtags matter too. Don’t go without leaving behind a #cricket. Go for niche hashtags: #legspinchallenge, #coverdriveking, or even #cricketgrind. The more niche, the more you are noticed.

When the Algorithm Is Your Coach

Something funny happened last year. I was doing my off-spin practice and posted a breakdown video—frame by frame, slow motion. Two grown men from completely different continents replied with biomechanical tips I hadn’t even considered. Free advice from strangers? That’s the strength of visibility.

If you’re on the path of learning to play cricket, take advantage of the mediums that enable you to post and get feedback. Instagram Reels, TikTok slow-mos, even Reddit cricket forums. Not only do you acquire skills—you acquire a feedback loop.

I’ve watched players drop bad habits quicker simply because the internet wouldn’t tolerate it. Harsh? Possibly. Effective? Certainly.

A Cricketer’s Guide to Going Viral Without Being Cheesy

It’s not dancing with a bat for everyone. It’s putting something up that people would want to follow on. It might be your first wicket, your most epic innings, or how you almost got selected for something and didn’t—and why.

My friend developed his channel by just reviewing kits of a local sports store. No sponsors. His personal opinion. Brands now send him kits. He started the same way as any individual who asked Google how to play cricket—except he did not keep it to himself.

Try challenge videos. “Hit the same stump 10 times.” “Play blindfolded.” Make it real, but enjoyable. Make others feel that they’re at the nets with you. If you can do that, you’ll improve even if you don’t have a single century to your name.

Don’t Just Do—Do It for the Camera

I remember one kid who played the perfect cover drive. All the mid-pitch coaches were clapping. Then, when we reviewed it afterwards, the camera didn’t flatter us. Harsh reality: unless it looks perfect on the web, it might as well not have occurred.

Besides learning cricket, learn the camera angles too. Side for batting, front for bowling, over-the-shoulder for wicketkeeping practice. Lighting is not sophisticated—it’s visibility. And dress in contrast to the background. You’ll thank me later when you’re clipping highlights.

And record yourself while you practice. Humans enjoy hearing thinking aloud while playing. That little thing provides a connection no slow-motion can.

Monetize or Miss Out

One of my classmates in my previous batch, an all-rounder at the middle-level, started coaching services via DMs online. The guy was booked 3 months in advance. He was not famous. But he’d built trust by regularly producing original content.

Once you have some presence and people see the effort you are committing towards playing cricket, you can go quite far financially. Affiliate links, shoutouts, coaching, branded posts. I’ve helped players publish ebooks based on cricket drills, and even those did better than we had expected.

But all this does not happen if your Instagram is private and your bio still remains “aspiring cricketer” with no clips to support the claim.

FAQs

How do I stay consistent with posting and training?

Batch your content. Record on Sundays, post throughout the week. Tools like Buffer or Later help. It’s okay to miss a post. Just don’t vanish for weeks.

Can I grow without being a professional cricketer?

Absolutely. Some of the biggest cricket content creators aren’t in state teams. Your growth comes from consistency, honesty, and angles—not your resume.

What’s the best social platform to focus on?

Depends on your style. Reels and TikTok for fast growth. YouTube if you like explaining things. Instagram if you’re blending lifestyle with cricket. Pick one, master it, then expand.