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English Willow Cricket Bat Weight Guide: What Weight Should You Use in 2026?
The number on the scale is the least important thing about a cricket bat's weight. Every season, players buy bats that are too heavy because they believe more mass equals more power. They grip harder to compensate, shorten their backlift, and lose timing on deliveries they previously played well. At Ciel Sports, we manufacture cricket bats in Meerut and customise them for players across 50+ countries. Here is the complete, honest weight guide — including the concept most buyers never encounter: the difference between scale weight and pickup, and why pickup wins every time.
- Scale weight vs pickup — the most important distinction in bat buying
- The three weight ranges explained — light, medium, heavy
- Pounds, ounces, and grams — the conversion table every Indian buyer needs
- Weight by playing role — opener to finisher
- Weight by format — Test, ODI, T20, club cricket
- What weight do professional cricketers actually use?
- The heavy bat myth — why a heavier bat does not always hit further
- How profile, spine, and edges change pickup without changing weight
- How to test pickup before buying
- Junior bat weights — the rule every parent and coach needs to know
- What weight should I order from Ciel Sports?
- FAQ — 7 weight questions answered by the manufacturer
1. Scale weight vs pickup — the most important distinction in bat buying
Walk into a sports store. Pick up bat A — it weighs 1,200g on the scale. Pick up bat B — it also weighs 1,200g. They feel completely different. Bat A swings smoothly, feels balanced, and responds quickly through the shot. Bat B feels sluggish, drags at the toe, and requires visible effort to bring through on time. Same scale weight. Totally different experience. Why?
Because scale weight and pickup are two different things — and most players only ever consider scale weight when they should be choosing by pickup.
What scale weight measures
Scale weight is the number on the scale — the total mass of the bat in grams or pounds and ounces. It is measured with the bat sitting still. It includes the blade, handle, grip, binding, and stickers. It tells you how much matter is in the bat. It does not tell you how the bat will feel when you are batting.
What pickup measures
Pickup is how the bat feels when you lift it into your stance, set for a shot, and swing through. It is determined by where the weight is distributed across the bat — specifically, where the centre of gravity sits relative to your hands. A bat whose mass is concentrated close to the hands (higher up the blade, toward the handle) picks up lighter and swings faster. A bat whose mass sits further from the hands (lower in the blade, toward the toe) feels heavier and more sluggish to swing, even at an identical scale weight.
- Measured with the bat at rest
- Just the total mass in grams
- Cannot predict how the bat swings
- Does not account for weight distribution
- Two identical scale weights can feel completely different
- The number players obsess over the most
- The number that matters least
- How the bat feels when you swing it
- Determined by weight distribution across the blade
- Affected by spine height, edge thickness, profile
- A well-balanced bat can feel 50–70g lighter than it is
- Directly affects bat speed and shot timing
- Cannot be read off a label — must be felt in the hands
- The number that matters most
"A bat with excellent pickup can feel 2–3 ounces lighter than it actually is. Pickup is the true test of a bat. Weight is only part of the story."
— Trogon Cricket bat making guideA player who buys a 1,280g bat because they want more power but whose natural bat speed suits a 1,180g bat will not hit the ball further with the heavier bat. They will hit it less far — because the extra weight slows the swing, and power in cricket is bat speed × mass, not mass alone. Every gram of weight that cannot be moved at full speed is dead weight working against the batter. This is why most professional cricketers, despite being tremendously fit and strong, use bats in the 1,150–1,200g range — not the 1,300g+ that many club players think they should use.
2. The three weight ranges explained — light, medium, heavy
When we ask players what weight bat they want, the majority say "medium to heavy" — 1,200g to 1,250g. When we assess what weight actually suits their bat speed, strength, and technique, the majority need medium — 1,150g to 1,200g. The gap between what players think they want and what actually improves their performance is almost always in the direction of lighter. This is true at every level from club cricket to state level. If you are unsure, start lighter than you think you need.
3. Pounds, ounces, and grams — the conversion table every Indian buyer needs
Cricket bat weight has historically been expressed in pounds and ounces (lbs and oz) — a legacy of the British origin of the sport. Most international brands still list weight in lbs/oz. Most Indian players think in grams. Here is the complete conversion table, with the weight categories marked.
| Lbs & oz | Grams (approx) | Category | Suits |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2lb 4oz | 1,021g | Light | Junior Harrow/U14, very technical openers |
| 2lb 5oz | 1,049g | Light | U16 players, lightweight preference adults |
| 2lb 6oz | 1,077g | Light | Adult players preferring maximum bat speed |
| 2lb 7oz | 1,106g | Light–Medium | Openers, touch players, T20 specialists |
| 2lb 8oz | 1,134g | Medium ★ | Most adult players — start here if unsure |
| 2lb 9oz | 1,162g | Medium ★ | Most professional players — Virat Kohli range |
| 2lb 10oz | 1,191g | Medium ★ | All-round club players, middle order |
| 2lb 11oz | 1,219g | Medium–Heavy | Physically strong middle order, power hitters |
| 2lb 12oz | 1,247g | Heavy | Power hitters with high bat speed capacity |
| 2lb 13oz | 1,276g | Heavy | Very strong players only — finishers, T20 sloggers |
| 3lb 0oz | 1,361g | Very Heavy | Almost no professional players — not recommended |
The three highlighted rows (★) represent the range used by the majority of professional cricketers worldwide and the range Ciel Sports recommends as a starting point for most club players. Note that these are naked weight figures — the bat before grip, binding, and stickers. The dressed weight (with grip and binding) is typically 50–60g heavier.
4. Weight by playing role — opener to finisher
5. Weight by format — Test, ODI, T20, club cricket
| Format | Recommended range | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Test cricket | 1,100g – 1,180g | Endurance over 5 days demands lighter bats. Old balls require precise timing, not power. Fast reaction to swing and seam in session 1 needs quick bat speed. |
| ODI cricket | 1,140g – 1,210g | 50 overs balances power innings (end overs) with technique overs (Powerplay). Medium weight suits both phases. Most ODI players use 2lb 9oz–2lb 11oz. |
| T20 cricket | 1,120g – 1,190g | Bat speed is power in T20. Power comes from swing velocity × mass — and for most players, lighter bats produce higher swing velocity that more than compensates for reduced mass. Lighter bats also respond faster to variations like yorkers and slower balls. |
| Club leather ball | 1,130g – 1,200g | Medium range for most club players. If playing both long innings and power hitting, 1,160g–1,190g is the ideal compromise. |
| Hard tennis / tape ball | 1,100g – 1,200g | The lighter, bouncier ball favours lighter, quicker bats. Bat speed matters more than bat mass for tennis ball hitting. Our Kashmir willow and Hard Tennis bat range is optimised for this. |
6. What weight do professional cricketers actually use?
The professional player data consistently shows something that surprises most club cricketers: the world's best players use medium-weight bats, not heavy ones. Here is the actual weight data for some of the most recognised batters in world cricket.
The most technically accomplished batters in the world — Kohli, Root, Tendulkar — all use medium-weight bats in the 1,134–1,191g range. The only players who consistently use heavy bats (1,250g+) are physically exceptional specimens — Dhoni's helicopter shot required unique wrist strength; Gayle's power is partly genetic. For every club player who looks at Dhoni and thinks "I should use a heavy bat too," the counter-argument is: you are not MS Dhoni. And even Dhoni's bat was chosen for its pickup, not its scale weight.
7. The heavy bat myth — why a heavier bat does not always hit further
This is the most persistent misconception in cricket equipment selection — and it costs players runs every season. The idea is simple and intuitive: a heavier object hitting a ball will send it further. More mass = more force. Newton's second law. It sounds right. In practice, for most cricketers, it is wrong.
The physics of bat-ball impact
The force transferred to the cricket ball at impact is a function of two things: the mass of the bat AND the velocity at which the bat is swinging at contact. The formula is effectively Force = Mass × Velocity. For a heavier bat to generate more force than a lighter one, the velocity must remain constant. If the heavier bat slows the swing — even slightly — the increased mass is offset or negated by reduced velocity.
For most players, a bat that is 50–100g heavier than their optimal weight will slow their swing by enough to reduce the effective force at contact. The ball does not travel further. It travels approximately the same distance — or less. And on deliveries where reaction time is critical (fast bowling, late-swinging deliveries), the heavier bat makes timing measurably harder.
What actually generates power in cricket
Maximum power in cricket comes from a combination of:
- Bat speed: The single biggest factor. A faster swing with a lighter bat often generates more power than a slower swing with a heavier bat.
- Timing: Hitting the ball in the middle of the sweet spot at the right moment transfers maximum energy. A heavier bat that slows your reaction time reduces timing quality.
- Pickup: A bat with excellent pickup feels lighter, swings faster, and allows the natural kinetic chain from ground → hips → shoulders → arms → hands to work unimpeded. A heavy, poorly-balanced bat breaks this chain.
"Most players I coach — men, women, and juniors alike — are swinging bats that are too heavy. The result is poor timing, slower bat speed, and poor technique. A heavy bat forces compensations: tight grip, shortened backlift, bottom-hand dominance. When players switch to lighter bats, something remarkable happens: bat speed improves, timing sharpens, and confidence returns."
— James Breese, ECB Cricket Coach, Cricket Matters8. How profile, spine, and edges change pickup without changing weight
This is where bat making becomes genuinely complex — and where the difference between a skilled bat maker and a factory line really shows. At Ciel Sports, the five profiles we offer are designed to create different pickup characteristics for different playing styles, all within the same weight range.
Spine height
The spine is the ridge running down the back of the blade. A higher spine concentrates wood mass in the central zone of the blade, closer to the hands. This moves the centre of gravity upward — producing a lighter pickup for the same scale weight. A flat back or low spine distributes mass lower in the blade (toward the toe), making the bat feel heavier to swing even at the same scale weight. This is why a Virat Kohli Duckbill profile often picks up lighter than a bottom-heavy MS Dhoni profile at the same weight — the mass is simply positioned differently.
Edge thickness
Thick edges (40–45mm) add mass to the sides of the blade rather than the face or back. Mass added to the edges increases the moment of inertia — the bat's resistance to rotation — making it feel more stable but slightly harder to manoeuvre at the extremes of the swing. Very thick edges (45mm+) can make a bat feel heavier than it is, even at a light scale weight.
Scalloping and concaving
Some bat profiles use "scalloped" backs — where material is removed from the back of the blade in specific zones to reduce weight in those areas. This allows bat makers to maintain large edges while reducing the overall weight and improving the pickup. At Ciel Sports, this technique is used on certain bespoke builds for players who want maximum edge size without sacrificing pickup.
9. How to test pickup before buying
Because pickup cannot be read off a label, testing it physically is the only reliable way to choose the right bat. Here is the exact testing process we recommend to every player who WhatsApps us about a bat purchase.
When ordering from cielsports.in, you cannot physically pick up the bat before purchase. This is why we recommend WhatsApping our founders at +91 95481 82993 with your height, weight, playing level, batting position, and what format you play most. We will recommend the exact weight and profile for your game before you order. If you receive the bat and the pickup is genuinely not right for you, contact us — we want every player to have a bat that suits their game.
10. Junior bat weights — the rule every parent and coach needs to know
The most important bat weight decision in cricket is not for adults — it is for juniors. Getting it wrong at youth level does not just affect performance. It instils technical compensations — tight grip, shortened backlift, bottom-hand dominance — that can take years to correct and prevent a young player from developing properly.
| Bat size | Age guide | Height guide | Weight range | Key rule |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Size 1 | 4–5 years | Under 4ft | 450–550g | Must be liftable with one hand |
| Size 2 | 5–7 years | 4ft – 4ft 3in | 550–650g | Technique over everything — go lighter if unsure |
| Size 3 | 6–8 years | 4ft 3in – 4ft 6in | 650–750g | Still should feel light — not a workout to swing |
| Size 4 | 8–10 years | 4ft 6in – 4ft 9in | 750–820g | Free swing more important than power at this age |
| Size 5 | 10–13 years | 4ft 9in – 5ft 1in | 820–880g | English willow recommended from this size upward |
| Size 6 | 12–15 years | 5ft 1in – 5ft 4in | 880–960g | Approach the weight testing process as for adults |
| Harrow | 14–16 years | 5ft 4in – 5ft 6in | 960–1,060g | Transition size — treat as adult weight selection |
| Short Handle (adult) | 16+ | Under 6ft | 1,100g – 1,250g | See adult guide above |
The most common junior bat mistake: buying a bat that is one size too large "to grow into it" — resulting in a bat that is 100–150g too heavy for the child's current strength. A junior who cannot swing the bat freely learns to compensate. They drop their backlift. They rely on the bottom hand. They grip so tightly their knuckles whiten. These habits become natural over two or three seasons and are extremely difficult to correct. A bat that is slightly too small is far better than one that is slightly too heavy. Use the height guide, not the age guide.
11. What weight should I order from Ciel Sports?
All Ciel Sports English willow bats are available across a weight range. When you order, you can specify your weight preference and we will match the bat to that specification at the factory before dispatch. Here is our recommendation based on playing level:
- Club beginner / first English willow bat: 1,130–1,160g (2lb 8oz–2lb 9oz). Start medium. You can always go heavier later once you know your preference.
- Regular club player (all positions): 1,150–1,190g (2lb 9oz–2lb 10oz). The range that suits the majority of serious adult club cricketers in India.
- Opener / technical player: 1,100–1,150g (2lb 7oz–2lb 8oz). Prioritise pickup — specify the lightest end of the range for your chosen profile.
- Power hitter / finisher: 1,180–1,230g (2lb 10oz–2lb 12oz). Go heavier only if you can maintain bat speed — WhatsApp us and we will discuss what suits your game.
- Not sure: WhatsApp +91 95481 82993 and tell us your height, position, and format. We will recommend the exact weight and profile.
12. Frequently asked questions — answered by the manufacturer
What is the ideal weight for a cricket bat? +
What is the difference between scale weight and pickup? +
What weight bat do professional cricketers use? +
Does a heavier cricket bat hit the ball further? +
How do I test a cricket bat's pickup before buying? +
What weight bat should a junior cricketer use? +
Should I use a lighter bat for T20 cricket? +
Get the right weight for your game.
Every Ciel Sports bat is available in your specified weight range. WhatsApp our founders directly at +91 95481 82993 — tell us your height, position, and format, and we will recommend the exact weight and profile. Factory-direct from Meerut. Free shipping India. Ships to 50+ countries.
Read next in this series
- → Best English Willow Cricket Bats in India 2026: Grade 1, 1+ and Player Grade Compared
- → What Is an English Willow Cricket Bat? Everything You Need to Know in 2026
- → How to Knock In an English Willow Cricket Bat: Step-by-Step Guide
- → How to Oil a Cricket Bat: Raw Linseed Oil, How Much, and How Often
- → Browse all Ciel Sports English willow cricket bats →