• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Duckworth Lewis discussion thread

Furball

Evil Scotsman
Don't want to de-rail the match thread any further, so new thread for a new discussion.

I don't know if I've got the maths spot on for this, but a glance at Statsguru shows that the average RR in T20Is is 7.52, with the average RR for ODIs played since Jan 1 2005 being 5.01.

Based on England's RR of 9.55 yesterday, which is 129% of the average, an equivelant ODI score would have been 318, which according to duckworth-lewis.com would have seen the West Indies set 171 to win from 20 overs, which immediately seems like a much fairer total - in this hypothetical scenario, West Indies would need to score at 8.5 an over in response to a total of 6.36 an over, as opposed to 10 plays 9.55.

I think D/L is a good system, however the last 2 WC games between England and West Indies have shown its flaws when applied to Twenty20 cricket. IMO, the maths involved definitely needs an overhaul.
 

Sir Alex

Banned
Am not sure about the logic behind extrapolation of a t20 total to One day total just based on their run rates.

In other words a equating a 192 total in T20s to a 318 total in one days doesn't look too acceptable for me. I'd back competitive teams to chase down the latter more easily than the former.
 
Last edited:

Furball

Evil Scotsman
Am not sure about the logic behind extrapolation of a t20 total to One day total just based on their run rates.

In other words a equating a 192 total in T20s to a 318 total in one days doesn't look too acceptable for me. I'd back competitive teams to chase down the former more easily than the latter.
The maths behind it:

Average RR in T20Is: 7.52
England's RR: 9.55 = 1.29 times the average.

Average RR in ODIs over last 5 years: 5.01
5.01 x 1.29 = 6.36 = 318 runs in 50 overs.

The maths isn't perfect, but the D/L par score for an ODI which is reduced to 20 overs for the team chasing 318, with all wickets intact, is 170. That immediately seems a lot fairer than a par score of 59 from 6 overs for a team chasing 192.

It's an imperfect example, and the maths might be questionable, as I'm not a mathematician, but the T20 system does look like it needs a review.

edit: Teams batting 1st who set over 170 have won 88% of the time in T20Is.
 
Last edited:

AaronK

State Regular
they could just freaking end the match rather than having players come in the field for 4 runs.. so freaking stupied.. having a tournment of this calibar in a place like West Indies was a wrong idea at the first.. now it is just freaking hard to wait till the rain is over..
 

Sir Alex

Banned
The maths behind it:

Average RR in T20Is: 7.52
England's RR: 9.55 = 1.29 times the average.

Average RR in ODIs over last 5 years: 5.01
5.01 x 1.29 = 6.36 = 318 runs in 50 overs.

The maths isn't perfect, but the D/L par score for an ODI which is reduced to 20 overs for the team chasing 318, with all wickets intact, is 170. That immediately seems a lot fairer than a par score of 59 from 6 overs for a team chasing 192.

It's an imperfect example, and the maths might be questionable, as I'm not a mathematician, but the T20 system does look like it needs a review.

edit: Teams batting 1st who set over 170 have won 88% of the time in T20Is.
Of course am not questioning your math mate, but the reasoning behind using run rates in T20s comparable to those in One days.

In the above example you extrapolated a total of 192 to 318 in a one day which then using DL you reduced back to 170 from 20 overs. ;wacko: So either the logic behind DL reducing a total of 318 to 170 in 20 overs is not fair, or your extrapolation of 192 to 318 is not. Because 192 cannot be equal to 170.

Methinks you're doing apples to oranges stuff here.

But I do agree with your premise that DL seriously need revision in T20s or be replaced by some other rule like super over.
 

Furball

Evil Scotsman
Of course am not questioning your math mate, but the reasoning behind using run rates in T20s comparable to those in One days.

In the above example you extrapolated a total of 192 to 318 in a one day which then using DL you reduced back to 170 from 20 overs. ;wacko: So either the logic behind DL reducing a total of 318 to 170 in 20 overs is not fair, or your extrapolation of 192 to 318 is not. Because 192 cannot be equal to 170.

Methinks you're doing apples to oranges stuff here.

But I do agree with your premise that DL seriously need revision in T20s or be replaced by some other rule like super over.
I'm not saying 192 is equivelant to 170.

My suspicion was that the D/L equation would have been much fairer to England had it been an ODI; I think the numbers I've come up with support that suspicion.

The equivelant score in an ODI, based simply on how much better England's performance was than the average, would be 318. A score of 318 would have required the Windies to chase 171 in 20 overs had it been a rain affected ODI; that appears to me to be a much fairer target than what transpired last night.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
Have never really agreed with any criticisms of it, TBH, including during the last game. The target was so small because of the runs WI hammered off the overs before the break. For over a third of the entire innings the were going at (IIRC) about 13rpo despite only needing 9rpo (at the time) and they didn't lose any wickets. That's all taken into account - what the West Indies thought they needed at the time they were batting in those first two overs. When that happens, of course the rest of the innings is going to be easy-going.

If anything, I think it's just shown that 6 overs just isn't a game of cricket, particularly when it's divided into two different parts chasing different totals. The D/L calculation was fine - people are blaming it, essentially, for putting such a big emphasis on 2.2 overs, but that's what happens if you play a six over contest. Cricket in any sense isn't supposed to be defined so wholly by such small sample sizes. If they can't make it to 15 overs they should just call it off IMO.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
Just to show how much those two overs before the break - quite justly, given the ridiculously short length of the game - actually changed things, the West Indies would've needed 73 to win off their 6 overs rather than the 60 they ended up chasing if the rain delay happened in the innings break and they never actually batted those 2.2 overs.
 

nightprowler10

Global Moderator
If anything, I think it's just shown that 6 overs just isn't a game of cricket, particularly when it's divided into two different parts chasing different totals. The D/L calculation was fine - people are blaming it, essentially, for putting such a big emphasis on 2.2 overs, but that's what happens if you play a six over contest. Cricket in any sense isn't supposed to be defined so wholly by such small sample sizes.
This, totally. No way should the game go on if you can only play 6 overs. Even in my 30/30 league I have to call a match officially rained out if 20 overs can't be bowled. For T20 I reckon it should something like 13 overs.
 

GIMH

Norwood's on Fire
The last two posts make a lot of sense. I guess any kind of reduced target is going to seem easier when the overs are lower - wickets become meaingless really.

However, I may revise my opinion. As things stand we are walloping these Thierry Henry haters quite comfortably according to DL. One over constitutes a game IMO.
 

Sir Alex

Banned
Just to show how much those two overs before the break - quite justly, given the ridiculously short length of the game - actually changed things, the West Indies would've needed 73 to win off their 6 overs rather than the 60 they ended up chasing if the rain delay happened in the innings break and they never actually batted those 2.2 overs.
Wow, how did you arrive at that? I mean the calculation for that?

I think it wouldn't have made any difference whether they'd been 30 or 0 at the break as long as they had not lost any wickets. Because DL takes into account the 'resources available' at time of break and resumption which is a product of wickets lost and overs remaining.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
I played around with the online calculator. Could've stuffed it up though. :p

But yeah, it does take into account the resources available, but it also takes into account how many runs are actually left to win. It's assumed that they'd have scored more quickly if they knew the innings was shorter, so the later the break is, the smaller the target becomes.

As I said in the other thread - imagine chasing 250 in an ODI, going off after 19 overs at 0/100 and then coming back on and being told that you needed to score 46 to win off one over because that's the 20 over equivalent of a 50-over 250. What you've already scored is taken into account.
 
Last edited:

Sir Alex

Banned
Just to show how much those two overs before the break - quite justly, given the ridiculously short length of the game - actually changed things, the West Indies would've needed 73 to win off their 6 overs rather than the 60 they ended up chasing if the rain delay happened in the innings break and they never actually batted those 2.2 overs.
Uh on second thoughts, nothing wrong with what you said. It's the 2.2 overs of wicketless batting that helped Wi.
 

Sir Alex

Banned
I played around with the online calculator. Could've stuffed it up though. :p

But yeah, it does take into account the resources available, but it also takes into account how many runs are actually left to win. It's assumed that they'd have scored more quickly if they knew the innings was shorter, so the later the break is, the smaller the target becomes.

As I said in the other thread - imagine chasing 250 in an ODI, going off after 19 overs at 0/100 and then coming back on and being told that you needed to score 46 to win off one over because that's the 20 over equivalent of a 50-over 250. What you've already scored is taken into account.
True. In your example, the DL par score at the 20 over mark would be 80odd, and having outscored it already, the team chasing would be declared winners by run differential between the Revised Target and actual total, and not wickets.

What am saying is the 100 already scored by them had no relevance in determining the 80odd revised Target, which was the point I was contesting in the other thread. Ie, Wi's score of 30odd had no role in determining the 60 they were set off 6.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
If anything, I think it's just shown that 6 overs just isn't a game of cricket, particularly when it's divided into two different parts chasing different totals. The D/L calculation was fine - people are blaming it, essentially, for putting such a big emphasis on 2.2 overs, but that's what happens if you play a six over contest. Cricket in any sense isn't supposed to be defined so wholly by such small sample sizes. If they can't make it to 15 overs they should just call it off IMO.
I think you've nailed it here. They should just introduce reserve days or play through the rain. Duckworth Lewis fails at T20. It's only a matter of time before a major final is decided in this manner and the world once again collectively facepalms at cricket.
 

maxtop123

Cricket Spectator
Well the entire Caribbean including Guyana has been experiencing a drought.The drought in Guyana continued until the T20 competition actually began. Go figure. If you want rain in Guyana put three sticks in the ground for international cricket.Works like a charm most of the time.
 

Top