Dilscoop


The Dilscoop is a cricket batting stroke developed by Sri Lankan batsman Tillakaratne Dilshan during the ICC World Twenty20 in 2009. The basis of the stroke is to go on one knee to a good length or slightly short of length delivery off a fast or medium paced bowler and 'scoop' the ball over the head of the wicket keeper. The ball travels straight towards the boundary behind the wicket keeper.
There has been much discussion whether the Dilscoop is identical to the Marillier or Paddle scoop. However according to former Australian captain Ian Chappell who was commentating during the above ICC World Twenty20, he had never seen any batsman play the ball straight over the wicket keeper's head as Dilshan. The shot earlier played by Doug Marillier during ICC World Cup was actually not directly overhead the wicket keeper. According to Dilshan he started practising this stroke against a bowling machine during his tenure for Delhi Daredevils at the 2009 Indian Premier League held in South Africa between April and May 2009.
While the Dilscoop travels straight over the wicket keeper, the Marilier travels towards fine leg, deep fine leg or over the wicket keeper and slips, and the paddle scoop preferred by many players including Moin Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq and Steve Waugh among others is played against a yorker.
The "Paddle scoop" shot was played much earlier, by then Somerset captain Brian Langford, in an English county match at the Edgarley ground in Glastonbury in 1962. It probably escaped the headlines because Langford, as primarily a spin bowler, batted well down the order - usually at 9.
Former Australian wicket keeper Ryan Campbell also played this shot twice in the dying overs of a one-day match against Sri Lanka in 2002. Given Campbell's one-day international career lasted only two matches, it is perhaps introducing the Australian cricketing public to this shot that is his greatest claim to fame.
The identical Discoop is recently followed by fellow Sri Lankan Niroshan Dickwella as a left hand stroke.