Your child shows genuine cricket talent. They love the game, they train hard, and you've committed to supporting them. Now what? How do you know if they're training correctly? What should you be watching for? What are the risks? And when should you push — and when should you hold back?
This guide is for cricket parents who take their child's development seriously but aren't sure what "serious development" should actually look like for an under-16 player.
The U-16 Window: Why It Matters So Much
For fast bowlers especially, the 14–16 age range is the most consequential in their development. This is when:
- Physical growth accelerates, changing their body mechanics substantially
- Bowling loads often increase dramatically (school + academy + club + trials)
- Technical habits solidify — good or bad — that will be very difficult to change later
- Growth plates in the lumbar spine are at their most vulnerable to stress injury
The combination of rapid physical change, increasing load, and solidifying technique makes this the window where a good support structure produces elite players — and a bad one produces early retirements.

"The best thing a cricket parent can do is make sure their child is training smart, not just training hard. Hard work without the right technique at this age creates injuries. Hard work with the right technique creates fast bowlers."
Workload: The Number Most Parents Don't Track
Weekly bowling load is the single most predictive factor for injury in young fast bowlers. Across all formats — academy, school, club cricket, and practice at home — most sports scientists recommend a ceiling of 30–40 overs per week for U-16 fast bowlers.
The problem: most parents don't track this. The school cricket coach doesn't know how much the academy is doing. The academy doesn't know how much the school is doing. And nobody knows how much the player is bowling in the backyard.
Start a simple weekly log. Total overs across all formats, every week during cricket season. If the number is consistently above 40, have a conversation with the coaches.
Technical Red Flags Parents Can Spot
You don't need to be a biomechanist to notice these warning signs in your child's bowling action:
- Head dropping dramatically at release — suggests leaning back, which puts stress on the lower back
- Front knee collapsing on landing — visible as the front leg bending sharply at delivery; causes energy loss and load on the back
- Short follow-through — if the arm stops abruptly after release rather than following through fully, the shoulder is absorbing all the deceleration load
- Action looks different from the right side vs. the left side view — suggests a mixed action, which is a primary injury risk
The Pain Conversation
Many young cricketers will not volunteer pain information because they don't want to stop playing. Cricket culture — particularly in India — often encourages "toughing it out." This is dangerous at U-16 when growth plates are open.
Create an environment where your child can tell you about pain without fearing that it means they'll be stopped from playing. The earlier pain is reported, the earlier it can be assessed — and the less likely it is to become a serious injury.
Any of these warrant immediate rest and assessment:
- Persistent lower back pain that's worse after bowling
- Shoulder pain that lingers for more than 24 hours after bowling
- Side pain (rib area) that comes on during or after bowling
- Any pain that causes them to change their action while bowling
What Good Progress Looks Like
Parents often focus on the wrong metrics — how fast they bowl, how many wickets they take, whether they're selected for representative teams. These are lag indicators. The lead indicators that tell you whether development is on track are:
- Is their technique improving over 6 months? (This requires tracking)
- Are they staying injury-free?
- Is their control improving (not just their pace)?
- Are they reading match situations better?
- Are they enjoying training?
📊 Track Technique, Not Just Results
CricMotion gives parents and coaches an objective, comparable phase-by-phase biomechanical analysis. Run one analysis every 6 weeks and you can see exactly what's changing in their action — not just whether they're bowling faster. It's the difference between coaching and guessing. Start with a free analysis →
The Selector Question: When to Push for Trials
Many cricket parents start focusing on selection — KSCA trials, school representation, district cricket — from around U-14. This is understandable but can distort development priorities. Players who are pushed for early selection often develop result-oriented habits (bowling for dot balls rather than developing variation) rather than technique-oriented ones.
The players who consistently break through at U-16 and U-19 level are usually those who spent U-14 obsessing over technique and U-16 applying it under competitive pressure. Get the sequence right.
Final Word
The best cricket parent is one who creates the conditions for long-term development: right academy, managed workload, open pain conversations, and a focus on technique improvement over short-term results. Your child's cricket journey at U-16 is not a sprint to selection — it's the foundation of everything that comes after.
⚠️ AI-Generated Content Disclosure: This article was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence by the CricMotion team. All biomechanical references are grounded in established cricket sports science research. Content is intended for educational purposes. CricMotion is an AI-powered cricket analysis platform — not a substitute for qualified coaching. © 2026 CricMotion. All rights reserved.