Cricket Season Stats Calculator
Enter performance data from multiple matches to calculate your season batting average, strike rate, bowling economy, wickets, and compare to format benchmarks.
Season Stats Tracker
Add your match-by-match performance. Batting and bowling are both optional — add only what applies to your role.
🏏 Batting Summary
🎯 Bowling Summary
Batting Avg
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Strike Rate
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Bowling Avg
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Economy Rate
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Why Tracking Season Stats Matters for Club Cricketers
Single-match scorecards are snapshots. Season statistics reveal your true level. A player who scores 15 in six innings is averaging 15; a player who scores 75 once and 0 five times is averaging 12.5. The aggregated numbers separate consistent performers from one-game wonders — and that’s exactly what selectors use when picking representative or cup squads.
How Batting Average Is Calculated
Batting average = Total runs scored ÷ Number of dismissals (not innings). Not-out innings count the runs but not the dismissal, which can significantly inflate averages for players who frequently bat at the end of an innings or finish unbeaten.
Strike Rate vs Average: Two Different Things
Batting average tells you how many runs you score per dismissal — it measures value. Strike rate tells you how fast you score — it measures impact. In T20 cricket, both matter, but they measure different things:
- A batter averaging 35 at SR 95 is valuable in ODIs but not T20s
- A batter averaging 18 at SR 165 is a T20 specialist — huge impact per over faced
- The all-round sweet spot for T20 batting is average 25+ at SR 130+
Bowling Average vs Economy: Understanding the Difference
Bowling average (runs per wicket) measures wicket-taking ability. Economy rate (runs per over) measures containment. Both are important in different match situations:
- A bowler with average 18 and economy 11 takes wickets but leaks runs — useful in Test cricket, dangerous in T20
- A bowler with average 35 and economy 6.5 is a containment specialist — valuable in limited-overs cricket
- The best T20 bowlers combine average below 25 with economy below 8
Using This Data for Selection
When you export or present your season stats, include the context: how many matches, what format, and what opposition level. A batting average of 40 across 15 club T20 matches against varied opposition is a strong credential. The CricPulse app tracks all of this automatically across every match you play — building a permanent career record without any manual entry.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I enter a part-over for bowling? +
Enter overs as a decimal using the .1 to .5 notation. For example, 3 overs and 4 balls = 3.4. The calculator converts this correctly for economy and average calculations. Do not enter 3.6 — overs only go up to .5 (5 balls).
What does "not out" do to my batting average? +
Not-out innings add to your run total but not to your dismissals count. Since batting average = runs ÷ dismissals, not-outs increase your average. A player who scored 30*, 45, 0, 25* across 4 innings has 2 dismissals and 100 runs for an average of 50.0 — much higher than a simple runs-per-innings calculation of 25. Select "Not out" for any innings where you were unbeaten.
What is a good batting average for club cricket? +
For T20 club cricket, a batting average above 25 is solid, 35+ is very good, and 45+ is exceptional. These numbers are lower than international cricket because club matches have more variable conditions, pitch quality, and competition levels. A consistent club batter averaging 28–32 over a full season typically bats in the top 3 positions.
What is a good bowling economy for club T20? +
At club T20 level, an economy rate below 8 runs per over is excellent. 8–9 is competitive. 9–11 is average. Above 11 is expensive and suggests the bowler is being targeted. For comparison, IPL bowlers average around 8.0–8.5 economy, so club cricket with similar targets is quite respectable.
Can I use this for Test or ODI stats? +
Yes — the batting average calculation (runs ÷ dismissals) is the same across all formats. The benchmarks in the verdict text are calibrated to T20 and club cricket. For Test cricket, an average of 40+ is world-class; for ODIs, 35+ is excellent. You can still use the calculator and apply your own format context to the numbers.
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