Leg break
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A leg break is a type of delivery in the sport of cricket. It is the stock delivery of a leg spin bowler. Leg breaks are also colloquially known as leggies.
A leg break is bowled by holding the cricket ball in the palm of the hand with the seam running across under all the fingers. As the ball is released, the wrist is rotated to the left (for a right-handed bowler) and the ball allowed to roll out of the hand over the little finger, giving the ball an anticlockwise spin as seen from behind. When the ball bounces on the pitch, the spin causes it to deviate towards the left from the bowler's perspective; this is to the rightt from the batsman's point of view, or towards the off side of a right-handed batsman. The ball spins away from the leg side, and this is where it gets the name leg break, meaning it breaks away from the leg.
A leg spin bowler will bowl mostly leg breaks, varying them by adjusting the line and length of the deliveries.
Leg breaks are considered to be one of the more difficult spin deliveries for a right-handed batsman to play. This is because the ball moves away from his body. This means that any miscalculation can result in an outside edge off the bat and a catch going to the wicket-keeper or slips fielders.
A left-handed batsman has less difficulty facing off break bowling, because the ball moves in towards the batsman's body, meaning the batsman's legs are usually in the path of the ball if it misses the bat or takes an edge. This makes it difficult for the bowler to get the batsman out bowled or caught from a leg break, but it does mean there is a chance of leg before wicket, assuming the ball has not turned enough to miss the leg stump.
A ball bowled by a left-arm unorthodox spin bowler with a leg break action spins in the opposite direction. Such a ball is not normally called a leg break, but a left-arm unorthodox spinner.