Watch Tuni New Colony for one over and the weak side announces itself. The ball does not simply leave the bat; it pulls children, parked items, windows, gates, and nervous adults into the same few seconds.
The New Colony moment is half safety and half appearance: a child asks for one last over, the ball clips near a car mirror, the gate rattles, and everyone looks at the front side because the practice space suddenly feels too exposed.
A second clue appears after the next bad hit: the kid runs behind the ball before the coach reacts, a bike noses into the side lane, and the batter is already asking whether to continue.
A new-colony practice corner becomes uncomfortable when a rough net spoils the visible home side or a neat-looking net still lets balls reach vehicles, windows, and gate frames. In Tuni New Colony, the cricket-net layout has to solve the place where the ball, the person chasing it, and the nearby object all meet.
On the ground in Tuni New Colony, this means newer colony homes, visible compound fronts, small terrace batting spaces, and family practice corners where finish and control both matter. The weak point is rarely obvious from a doorway; it appears after the batter repeats the same shot a few times.
EverSafe treats Tuni New Colony cricket-net work as finish-sensitive safety. The team reads the batting direction first, then keeps support points, rope edging, side returns, and entry neat enough for a visible residential compound.