Stats Analysis

No changes at the top, Stirling and Mortaza lead the rest

An analysis of performances in the first eight games of the World Cup

Sean Williams came up with a match-winning performance against the UAE  Getty Images

This analysis will be done at suitable points during the World Cup 2015 so that the readers can see the way the Performance tables evolve. As more matches get played the top performance mosaic changes and readers can identify with what happened in the past few days. The qualifying bar for inclusion moves higher as more matches get played.

The second round of matches proved quite different to the first-four "Score big and win big" type of matches. A fancied team scored 300 but this was chased down by a team from the lower echelons quite comfortably. Then a sub-150 total proved tricky for a top team. A comfortable win followed next and then a near-300 total was chased, with some bumps on the way. All in all, we were back in typical World Cup territory.

Top Batting performances in WC 2015: in 8 matches played so far
SNo Rating Pts Year ODI# Batsman For VsRuns Balls
1 39720153601DA Miller South Africa Zim138* 92
2 38620153600JWA Taylor England Aus 98* 90
3 37020153600AJ Finch Australia Eng135 128
4 31420153601JP Duminy South Africa Zim115*100
5 29020153602V Kohli India Pak107 126
6 24220153603PR Stirling Ireland Win 92 84
7 23820153603LMP Simmons West Indies Ire102 84
8 23820153603NJ O'Brien Ireland Win 79* 60
9 22720153603EC Joyce Ireland Win 84 67
10 22320153602Misbah-ul-Haq Pakistan Ind 76 84

The top five batting performances stayed at the top. Then come Paul Stirling's innings which led the trio of match-winning innings for Ireland, Lendl Simmons' losing hundred for West Indies, Niall O'Brien's lovely finishing act and Ed Joyce's support act. The other winning fifty, by Sean Williams, just missed the cut. The lack of quality in UAE bowling was a major reason. As we cover more matches, the fifties would disappear and it would take an exceptional score below 100 to break into the top ten.

Top Bowling performances in WC 2015: in 8 matches played so far
SNo Rating Pts Year ODI# Bowler For VsAnalysis
1 45820153600MR Marsh Australia Eng 9.0 - 0 - 33 - 5
2 42720153602Sohail Khan Pakistan Ind10.0 - 0 - 55 - 5
3 31120153600ST Finn England Aus10.0 - 0 - 71 - 5
4 28720153602Mohammed Shami India Pak 9.0 - 1 - 35 - 4
5 22020153605Mashrafe Mortaza Bangladesh Afg 9.0 - 2 - 20 - 3
6 21020153603GH Dockrell Ireland Win10.0 - 0 - 50 - 3
7 20220153604JH Davey Scotland Nzl 7.0 - 0 - 40 - 3

Same thing happens in bowling also. Mashrafe Mortaza, George Dockrell and Josh Davey come in at the later part of the table. It is understandable as no one even captured four wickets in this quartet of matches.

Top Player performances in WC 2015: in 8 matches played so far
SNo Rating Pts Year ODI# Player For Vs Runs Balls Analysis
1 51020153600MR Marsh Australia Eng 23 20 9.0-0-33-5
2 28120153599CJ Anderson New Zealand Slk 75 46 3.1-0-18-2
3 27820153606SC Williams Zimbabwe Uae 76* 65 8.0-0-43-2
4 25120153605Shakib Al Hasan Bangladesh Afg 63 51 8.5-0-43-2

The trend continues here also. At least we have two all-round performances making the cut. Sean Williams' truly match-winning innings of 76 was well supported by his two middle-order wickets and one catch. This performance was quite close to that of Corey Anderson on the first day. Shakib Al Hasan's performance was almost identical to that of Williams. One reason why his performance ranked slightly lower than Williams is his economy rate vis-a-vis the team rate.

Top Team performances in WC 2015: in 8 matches played so far
SNo Rating Pts Year ODI# Team Own score Vs Other score
1 64020153605Bangladesh 267 for 10 in 50.0Afg162 for 10 in 42.5
2 59620153600Australia 342 for 9 in 50.0Eng231 for 10 in 41.5
3 59620153599New Zealand 331 for 6 in 50.0Slk233 for 10 in 46.1
4 59220153602India 300 for 7 in 50.0Pak224 for 10 in 47.0
5 59020153603Ireland 307 for 6 in 45.5Win304 for 7 in 50.0
6 58820153604New Zealand 146 for 7 in 24.5Sco142 for 10 in 36.2
7 57420153601South Africa 339 for 4 in 50.0Zim277 for 10 in 48.2
8 53420153606Zimbabwe 286 for 6 in 48.0Uae285 for 7 in 50.0
9 41620153604Scotland 142 for 10 in 36.2Nzl146 for 7 in 24.5
10 41020153600England 231 for 10 in 41.5Aus342 for 9 in 50.0

We have some real changes as far as team table is concerned. Bangladesh's very easy win goes to the top, with 640 points. The main reason for this is the fact that the win margin is around 40% of the team runs. A far easier win than those backed by first-innings totals of 300 runs. New Zealand lost out because they had lost too many wickets. The wicket-resource remaining was very little even though 50% of the ball-resource was still available. They are still in the top ten.

A brief introduction into the methodology of Performance Analysis.

The Batting Performance Ratings analysis takes into account the Runs scored, Balls faced, Next highest score (if this is the highest score), % of Team score, Innings status at entry, Bowling quality, Pitch information, Team strengths, Target score in front, Match location, Result and Match importance. These parameters are given appropriate weights. The calculations are done in such a way that Rating points of 1000 would be allotted to a mind-blowing and match-winning score of 200 in 150 balls in a WC final.

The Bowling Performance Ratings analysis takes into account the Wickets captured, Quality of batsmen dismissed, Scores at which batsmen were dismissed, Bowling accuracy, Batting quality, Pitch information, Team strengths, Target being defended, Match location, Result and Match importance. The calculations are done in such a way that Rating points of 1000 would be allotted to a magnificent and match-winning analysis of 10-2-15-6 in a WC final.

The Player Performance Ratings analysis takes into account the Batting Rating points, Bowling Rating points and the Fielding Rating points, which is a combination of catches and stumpings. There are minimum criteria for batting and bowling stints to ensure that these are genuinely all-round performances.

The Team Performance Ratings analysis takes into account the Result, Margin of win, Resources utilized, Team strengths, Match location and Match importance. The calculations are done in such a way that Rating points of 1000 would be allotted to an overwhelming win by 150 runs or 8 wickets in a WC final.

Anantha Narayanan has written for ESPNcricinfo and CastrolCricket and worked with a number of companies on their cricket performance ratings-related systems