· 6 min read

Understanding Cricket Extras: Wides, No Balls, Byes & Leg Byes

Extras can decide close matches — a wide in the last over, a no-ball that gives a free hit. Here's a complete breakdown of every type of extra in cricket.

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Extras — also called “sundries” in Australia — are runs added to the team total that aren’t credited to any individual batter. They come from bowling errors (wides, no balls) or misfields (byes, leg byes), plus rare penalty runs. In close matches, extras can be the difference between winning and losing.

Types of Extras

Wides

A delivery is called “wide” when it passes so far from the batter that they can’t play a normal cricket shot. The umpire signals by extending both arms horizontally.

  • Result: 1 run added to extras (+ any additional runs scored off the wide)
  • Ball doesn’t count: The ball must be re-bowled
  • Dismissals possible: Stumped or run out (but not bowled, caught, or LBW)

T20 vs ODI vs Test differences:

  • T20 cricket: Very strict wide rule. Anything beyond the wide guideline on the off side or down the leg side is called wide. The guideline is typically one bat-width outside off stump.
  • ODI cricket: Similar to T20 but marginally more lenient.
  • Test cricket: Much more lenient. The ball needs to be significantly wide to be called — a batter can leave deliveries outside off without them being wides.

No Balls

A no ball is called for several reasons, most commonly when the bowler oversteps the popping crease (the front line at the bowling end). The umpire calls “no ball” and raises one arm to the side.

  • Front foot no ball: Any part of the bowler’s front foot lands beyond the popping crease
  • Height no ball: A full toss that passes the batter above waist height
  • Bouncer restrictions: More than 2 bouncers per over in Tests/ODIs, more than 1 in T20s
  • Fielding restrictions: Too many fielders outside the circle during powerplay

Consequences:

  • 1 run added to extras
  • Ball must be re-bowled
  • Free hit (limited-overs only): The next delivery after a no ball is a “free hit” — the batter cannot be dismissed except by run out
  • Any runs scored off a no ball still count (to the batter if hit, to extras if missed)

Byes

Runs scored when the ball passes the batter without touching the bat or body, and the wicketkeeper misses it. The umpire signals byes by raising one hand above the head.

  • Byes are added to the team total as extras
  • They are not charged against the bowler — the bowler’s figures don’t include byes
  • The ball counts as a legitimate delivery (it’s counted in the over)

Leg Byes

Runs scored when the ball hits the batter’s body (not the bat) and deflects away. The umpire signals by raising one knee and touching it.

  • Only awarded if the batter was attempting a shot or trying to avoid the ball
  • If the batter deliberately pads the ball away without attempting a shot, leg byes are not awarded
  • Like byes, they’re extras — not credited to any batter and not charged to the bowler

Penalty Runs

In rare cases, umpires can award 5 penalty runs for:

  • The ball hitting a fielder’s discarded equipment (helmet on the ground behind the keeper)
  • Deliberate distraction or obstruction by the fielding team
  • Unfair ball tampering
  • Damaging the pitch deliberately
  • Time-wasting (in some competitions)

How Extras Appear on the Scorecard

On a scorecard, extras are listed separately from batting totals:

Extras: 12 (b 3, lb 4, w 4, nb 1)
Total: 185/7 (20 overs)

Where b = byes, lb = leg byes, w = wides, nb = no balls. The total (185) includes all extras.

Extras in Different Formats

TypeTestODIT20
WideLenientModerateVery strict
No ball — free hitNoYesYes
Bouncers per over221
Avg extras per innings15-2510-208-15
Impact on resultModerateSignificantVery significant

Why Extras Matter

In a T20 match decided by 2 runs, those 3 wides in the 18th over become critical. Teams that bowl fewer extras consistently outperform those that don’t. In fact, studies show that the team that bowls fewer extras wins roughly 60% of limited-overs matches.

For scorers, recording extras accurately is essential — they affect the team total, the bowler’s over count (re-bowled deliveries), and bowling economy figures.

Score Every Extra Accurately

Cricket Scoring handles all types of extras — wides, no balls (with automatic free-hit tracking), byes, and leg byes. Just tap the right button and the app does the rest.

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