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How to Bowl a Teesra in Cricket: Grip and Action

The teesra is an off-spinner's mystery delivery that goes straight on instead of turning. Bowled with a pronated wrist and altered finger position, it deceives batters expecting turn from the pitch.

By SportsMonkie Editorial Updated June 29, 2026

The teesra is an off-spinner’s straight delivery disguised within a standard off-break action. It goes straight on without turning, trapping batters who commit to playing for spin. Bowl it by pronating the wrist and altering the finger roll at release while keeping your arm path identical to the off-break.

What the Teesra Does

An off-spin bowler has three primary deliveries:

DeliverySpin Direction (vs right-hander)Key Mechanism
Off-breakTurns from off to leg (into batter)Index finger rolls over the seam
DoosraTurns from leg to off (away from batter)Wrist rotates, back of hand faces batter
TeesraGoes straight on, no turnWrist pronated, fingers neutralise spin

The teesra’s value is deception. If the batter cannot read it, they cannot commit to playing the line — even if it would be a very hittable delivery if identified.

The Grip

Start from your standard off-break grip as the baseline:

  1. Index and middle fingers spread across the seam, index finger doing the primary work
  2. Thumb lightly resting underneath
  3. Ring and little fingers on the side for balance

For the teesra:

  • The fingers remain in roughly the same position, but the wrist rotates inward (pronates) at the point of release
  • Instead of the index finger rolling over the top of the ball to impart off-spin, the fingers push through the ball with reduced side rotation
  • The wrist position effectively neutralises the spin

Step-by-Step Bowling Action

Step 1: Commit to your standard off-break action completely. Your run-up, shoulder alignment, arm height, and load-up must be identical to your normal delivery. Any visual difference alerts the batter.

Step 2: Change the wrist position late — inside your hand. The pronate occurs in the split second before release. Your elbow and shoulder are tracking the same as always; only the wrist and finger action change.

Step 3: At release, let the fingers push through the ball. Rather than rolling the index finger to the left (from your perspective as a right-arm bowler), push the ball out of your hand with less rotational force. The ball exits with topspin or overspin rather than conventional off-spin.

Step 4: Maintain your follow-through. A shortened or altered follow-through is a telltale sign for sharp batters. Complete the action as if you bowled a standard off-break.

Step 5: Target the top of off stump or just outside. The teesra that goes straight on and hits the top of off stump is nearly unplayable if the batter was playing for turn.

Common Mistakes

  • Changing your action visibly — the delivery only works if the batter cannot pick it
  • Not fully pronating — a half-pronated wrist produces a slow delivery that still turns slightly, making it readable
  • Overusing it — like all mystery deliveries, frequency reduces effectiveness dramatically

When to Use the Teesra

The teesra is most effective:

  • After establishing off-break turn earlier in a spell
  • Against batters who shuffle across their crease to play the sweep or reverse sweep
  • When the pitch is turning — the expectation of turn is what the teesra exploits

Quick summary: The teesra is the off-spinner’s straight delivery — no turn, disguised within the off-break action. Pronate the wrist and push through the ball at release rather than rolling the index finger. It works by exploiting the batter’s expectation of turn. Use it sparingly, after establishing the off-break, and keep your action completely identical to your standard delivery.

Frequently asked questions

Who invented the teesra?+

The teesra is most closely associated with Pakistani off-spinner Saqlain Mushtaq, who is widely credited with developing and popularising it in international cricket during the late 1990s and early 2000s.

What does 'teesra' mean?+

Teesra is an Urdu word meaning 'third one'. It refers to the off-spinner's third weapon — after the standard off-break and the doosra — that goes straight on rather than turning either way.

Is the teesra different from the doosra?+

Yes. The doosra turns away from a right-handed batter (like a leg-break), while the teesra goes straight on without turning. Both are designed to deceive a batter expecting off-break turn.

Sources