New Zealand batter Glenn Phillips said his audacious switch-hitting show in a recent Super Smash match was no gimmick but a tactical option he has honed for years to counter left-arm spin.
In last week's match against Central Districts, Otago right-hander Phillips switched stance while off-spinner Dean Foxcroft was midway through his run-up, and hit the bowler for a four with what could have been mistaken for a full-blooded cover drive from a left-handed batter.
Jaws dropped further in the final over of the Otago innings when Phillips took up a left-hander's stance even before left-arm spinner Jayden Lennox had begun his run-up and hit the bowler for a six.
"I do enjoy my left-handed batting training," Phillips, who smashed an unbeaten 90 off 48 balls in the game, said before leaving for New Zealand's white-ball
Teams often employ a left-arm orthodox spinner to take the ball away from a right-handed batter, especially in the 20-overs format.
Phillips said he even faced pacers in the nets with a switched stance to improve his left-handed batting.
"It's been a few years since it's really had a chance to come out ... but for it to actually pay off, and for years of work to come out on the field was really (pleasing)," he added.