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Cricket Rating Systems

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Cricket is a bat and ball sport that probably originated in England more than 300 years ago. It is a game that lends itself to statistical analysis and cricket fans have used these statistics to argue the merits of individual players and teams for many years.

Since no single statistic reliably predicts which players will perform best in any given game nor which teams will perform best in any given competition, various cricket fans have developed more complicated rating systems that attempt to do that (with mixed success). With the increasing popularity of the Internet, many alternative rating systems for both cricket teams and individuals are published and updated regularly by devotees.

Individual statistics and ratings

There are three main areas in which cricket statistics are recorded: batting, bowling and fielding. Raw data such as runs scored, wickets taken and catches held are used a crude measure of skill in those three areas. More refined are the batting and bowling averages.

One potential flaw in these averages is they don't take into account the strength of the opposition. Another concerns the period over which you calculate the average.

To try to compensate, various people have come up with alternative rating systems. The best known of these are the ICC Player Ratings, developed by accountants Price Waterhouse Coopers and endorsed by the International Cricket Council.

Team statistics and ratings

While individual statistics such as batting and bowling averages have been used for over 100 years, attempts to rank teams are a relatively recent phenomenon.

Former Wisden editor Matthew Engel proposed a system in 1995 that ranked all the test teams on the basis of the most recent series performance against various other test teams ([Engel 1997]).

Since Wisden is widely known as the "cricket bible", the rankings were the subject of much discussion in the cricket world and eventually prompted the ICC to institute a test championship in May 2001, based on the Wisden system ([ICC Handbook 2005-06]).

In January 2003, South Africa ascended to the top position after a home series victory against Pakistan. This led to criticism of the existing system because South Africa had lost its most recent home and away test series against Australia and reched number one largely because Australia hadn't played lesser test nations Zimbabwe and Bangladesh.

The ICC reviewed the rankings and decided to institute a new system developed by David Kendix, an actuary and cricket scorer. This system had already been ranking one day international teams since October 2002 ([ICC Handbook 2005-06]).

The stated concept behind the ICC-Kendix ratings is that of a batting average. A team that wins will improve its average while one that loses will see its average decrease. See ICC Test Championship or ICC ODI Championship for more information on how these calculations are made.

The discussions about the strengths and weaknesses of the Wisden and ICC systems no doubt prompted other cricket fans to try their hands at different rating systems. The different systems tend to fall into four categories:

Points-based systems

The simplest rating system is a points-based one, like a football league table. Teams get a certain number of points for wins, draws and losses and they are ranked according to who has the most points. Because cricket series aren't played as part of an organised league, teams invariably play a different number of matches to other teams so rather than use total points for rankings, all the points-based systems use an average of total points divided by games played. These systems include:

Ratings-based systems

Ratings-based systems originated in the chess world and are premised on the idea that a team or an individual has an inherent rating and one with a higher rating should beat one with a lower rating more often than not. If a lower rated team upsets the higher rated one then its rating will increase at the expense of the other team.

Systems can be balanced or unbalanced. In a balanced system, the amount one team's ratings increases is equivalent to how much its opponent's rating decreases so the total number of points remains constant. This isn't necessarily the case in unbalanced systems.

Modified points systems

Some systems combine elements of points and ratings systems. This includes the official ICC ratings.

Averages-based system

The fourth approach to ratings doesn't necessarily look at the result but looks at the batting and bowling averages of each team. This allows a finer comparison than straight win-loss comparisons but can be prey to distortions if teams have a tendency to win big or lose big. To reuse the football table analogy, it is equivalent to ranking teams on points scored for and against rather than wins and losses.

Comparison

As of July 2006, here is how the various systems ranked the top ten test teams:

Rank ICC AQB Date Herman Howstat Rediff Shane TCRS
1
Australia
Australia
Australia
Australia
Australia
Australia
Australia
Australia
2
Pakistan
Pakistan
England
England
Pakistan
England
England
England
3
England
England
India
Pakistan
England
India
Pakistan
South Africa
4
India
India
South Africa
South Africa
Sri Lanka
South Africa
India
Pakistan
5
Sri Lanka
South Africa
New Zealand
India
South Africa
Pakistan
South Africa
India
6
South Africa
Sri Lanka
West Indies
Sri Lanka
New Zealand
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka
7
New Zealand
New Zealand
Pakistan
New Zealand
India
New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand
8
West Indies
West Indies
Sri Lanka
West Indies
West Indies
West Indies
West Indies
West Indies
9
Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Bangladesh
Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
10
Bangladesh
Bangladesh
Bangladesh
Zimbabwe
Bangladesh
Bangladesh

 


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