The re-upload is where the analysis becomes a coaching system rather than a one-time report. It's where "I think I'm improving" becomes "here's the number that confirms it."
The rule
Re-upload after two focused practice sessions — not two casual sessions. Two sessions where you specifically ran drill 1 for 5 minutes at the start and applied the coaching cue throughout.
What to do between uploads
Session 1 after analysis: Read Coach Arjun's note again. Run the primary drill for 5 minutes before any live bowling or batting. Apply one coaching cue throughout the net session. Film the drill — compare with the original analysis frame.
Session 2 after analysis: Run the primary drill again. If session 1 went well, add the secondary drill. Apply the coaching cue — it should feel more natural than session 1. After the session, film from the same angle as your original analysis and upload for re-analysis.
Film from the same angle — this is critical
For Coach Arjun to compare accurately, the camera angle needs to be consistent — side-on, hip height, 3–5 metres from the crease. Keep a note of your filming setup and replicate it for every re-upload.
How to read the comparison
- Phase score up 10+ points: Real improvement. The drill worked. Continue.
- Phase score up 3–9 points: Right direction. Technique changing but not fully established. Continue same drill for one more cycle.
- Phase score unchanged: See troubleshooting below.
- New flags appeared: Common when the root cause is partially fixed — a compensation that was masking an upstream problem is removed. Coach Arjun will explain this in his note.

"The comparison is the most important moment in the whole process. Most players see movement in 2–3 key parameters after two focused sessions. That's progress — not perfect scores, but numbers moving in the right direction. — Arjun Sir"
Troubleshooting: when re-uploads don't show improvement
- The drill was done incorrectly. Film yourself doing the drill and compare exactly to the description. Small deviations matter.
- The coaching cue wasn't applied consistently. The cue should be in the player's mind on every delivery throughout the session — not just during the drill.
- Two sessions wasn't enough for this pattern. Deep patterns may need 4–6 sessions. Continue before concluding the approach is wrong.
- The camera angle changed. Check that the re-upload was filmed from the same position as the original.
If you're getting inconsistent results, email hello@cricmotion.com with your analysis IDs. We'll review the specific case.