Anatomy of a Cricket Scorecard
A complete cricket scorecard has several sections. Whether you're looking at a paper scoresheet, Cricinfo, or a scoring app, the core sections are the same:
- Match header — teams, venue, date, toss, and format
- Batting card — each batter's performance
- Extras — additional runs (wides, no-balls, byes, leg-byes)
- Total — total runs, wickets, and overs
- Fall of wickets (FOW) — score when each wicket fell
- Bowling card — each bowler's performance
- Result — who won and by how much
Reading the Batting Card
The batting card lists every batter who came to the crease. It's the largest section of any scorecard. Here's what each column means:
| Column | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Batter | Name of the batter | V Kohli |
| Dismissal | How they got out | c Smith b Anderson |
| R (Runs) | Runs scored | 72 |
| B (Balls) | Balls faced | 48 |
| 4s | Number of fours hit | 6 |
| 6s | Number of sixes hit | 3 |
| SR | Strike rate (runs per 100 balls) | 150.00 |
Understanding Dismissal Descriptions
The dismissal column uses standard cricket abbreviations. Here's how to decode them:
- c Smith b Anderson — caught by Smith, bowled by Anderson
- b Bumrah — bowled by Bumrah (stumps hit)
- lbw b Ashwin — leg before wicket, bowled by Ashwin
- run out (Jadeja) — run out by Jadeja's throw
- st Pant b Ashwin — stumped by Pant off Ashwin's bowling
- c & b Jadeja — caught and bowled (caught by the bowler)
- hit wicket b Starc — batter hit their own stumps
- not out — batter was still batting when innings ended
- retired hurt — batter left due to injury
Understanding Extras
Extras are runs scored without the batter hitting the ball (or runs awarded due to bowling errors). They appear as a separate line on the scorecard:
Extras: 12 (b 2, lb 3, w 5, nb 2, p 0)
- b (byes) — ball passes the batter and keeper, runs taken
- lb (leg byes) — ball hits the batter (not bat), runs taken
- w (wides) — ball too wide for the batter to play, 1 extra run + any runs taken
- nb (no balls) — bowler oversteps the crease, 1 extra run + any runs scored
- p (penalty runs) — awarded for rule violations (rare)
Reading the Total Line
The total line summarizes the innings:
Total: 185/6 (20 overs) — RR: 9.25
- 185 — total runs scored
- /6 — 6 wickets lost (10 means all out)
- 20 overs — overs bowled
- RR: 9.25 — run rate (runs per over)
Fall of Wickets (FOW)
The fall of wickets section shows the score at which each wicket fell. This tells you about the partnerships and how the innings progressed:
FOW: 1-23 (Rohit, 3.2), 2-45 (Rahul, 6.4), 3-112 (Kohli, 15.1)
Reading this: the 1st wicket fell at 23 runs (Rohit out, in over 3.2), the 2nd at 45 runs, and the 3rd at 112. You can calculate partnerships: the 2nd-wicket partnership was 45 − 23 = 22 runs, and the 3rd-wicket stand was 112 − 45 = 67 runs.
Reading the Bowling Card
The bowling card shows each bowler's figures. Here's what each column means:
| Column | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Bowler | Name of the bowler | J Bumrah |
| O (Overs) | Overs bowled | 4 |
| M (Maidens) | Overs with 0 runs conceded | 1 |
| R (Runs) | Runs conceded | 24 |
| W (Wickets) | Wickets taken | 3 |
| Econ | Economy rate (runs per over) | 6.00 |
| Dots | Dot balls bowled (not always shown) | 12 |
Bowling Figures Shorthand
Bowling figures are often written in shorthand as O-M-R-W. For example:
Bumrah: 4-1-24-3
This means: 4 overs bowled, 1 maiden, 24 runs conceded, 3 wickets taken. That's an economy rate of 6.00 and a strike rate of 8.0 (a wicket every 8 balls).
The Result Line
At the bottom of the scorecard is the match result. It's stated differently depending on who won:
- "India won by 6 wickets" — the chasing team won (wickets remaining).
- "Australia won by 35 runs" — the team batting first won (margin in runs).
- "Match tied" — scores were level after both innings.
- "India won in Super Over" — tiebreaker after a tied match.
Digital vs Paper Scorecards
Modern digital scorecards (like those from our Cricket Scoring app) include additional data that traditional paper scorecards don't:
- Ball-by-ball commentary — a record of every delivery
- Partnership details — runs, balls, and run rate for each partnership
- Phase breakdowns — powerplay, middle, and death over stats
- Wagon wheels — visual plots of where runs were scored
- Manhattan graphs — runs scored per over in a bar chart
Quick Tips for Reading Scorecards
- Check FOW for collapses: If 3 wickets fell within 10 runs, that was a batting collapse.
- Compare economy rates: The bowler with the lowest economy rate was the most restrictive.
- Look at extras: High extras (15+) suggest poor bowling discipline.
- Strike rate tells the tempo: Batters with SR above 150 were going hard.
- Not-out batters didn't finish the job (in a loss) or anchored the chase (in a win).
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