![As box cricket soars, so does demand for customised bats](https://th-i.thgim.com/public/news/national/kerala/qmuqvz/article68585591.ece/alternates/LANDSCAPE_1200/IMG-20240830-WA0036.jpg)
As box cricket soars, so does demand for customised bats
The Hindu
Customised lightweight bats for softball cricket, crafted with precision to meet individual player preferences, gaining popularity worldwide.
Subtlety has little place in softball cricket, box cricket as it is called when staged in net-fenced artificial turfs.
The game plan is rather simple in this ultra-miniature format of Twenty20, where matches are often played five or six-overs-a-side; swing hard and pray that it connects for a maximum every single ball. Anything less is mercilessly condemned as a failure.
Thus emerged the customised low weight bats, instantly identifiable by their unique hollowed-out design on the rear, best suited for the big-hitting that the format demands.
Akhil Sudhi and his partner Vaisakh from Neyyattinkara in Thiruvananthapuram were perhaps among the first to carve such bats out of normal Kashmiri willows about 12-13 years back. “The normal Kashmiri willow that weighs around 1,300 g is chipped down by removing wood from the backside of the bats to anywhere between 800 and 850 g. Though basic machines are used for toning down the meaty wood, it requires considerable skill to customise the willows to the unique demands, which vary from player to player. Even the brand of the softballs being used influence the customisation demands,” said Akhil who brings out bats by the brand name SevensV3.
And those demands, apart from reducing the weight, can be exhausting. Longer or shorter bat length matching the height of the player, increased width, meaty upper and lower blade, near perfect overall balance, long or short handle, greater curve at the bottom, thicker edges to name a few. Almost all who dabble in the field both sell new bats and customise pre-owned bats.
“Depending on the specifications, some even insist on carving their names, customisation can run into hours. Hence, too many bats cannot be sold as it would disrupt the delivery of already committed ones,” said Anurag Babu from Viyyur in Thrissur who sells customised bats by the name Athidi Sports named after his daughter.
If softball cricket tournaments were few and far between in the past, their number has now soared thanks to the proliferation of artificial turfs, especially the covered ones. From leagues at the district level, there are now panchayat and even ward-level leagues. In short, the concept off season, previously marked by the onset of monsoon, has disappeared.