T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

With the Men’s T20 World Cup occurring in USA and West Indies from June 1-29, live on Sky Sports, we present to you a language buster separating a portion of the terms you might hear, including powerplay, net run-rate, drop-in pitch, DLS, DRS and, possibly, Mankad…

The Men’s T20 World Cup starts this end of the week, so prepare for large sixes, stumps being splattered, and a ton of cricket language.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

 

DLS (Duckworth-Lewis-Stern)

This is the method used to calculate the number of runs a team batting second requires if a match is interrupted by the weather and overs are lost. The formula assesses how many overs are remaining and how many wickets the batting side have left with the target adjusted proportionally. Let’s hope for a rain-free event so we don’t need to get into that!

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

DRS (Decision Review System)

Teams can challenge the on-field umpire’s call of out or not out and bring the third umpire into play if they think a decision, usually lbw or caught, is incorrect. Sides are given two challenges in T20 cricket and retain a challenge if their review is successful or lose it if not. If an lbw decision sticks with the umpire’s call – due to where the ball pitched, hit the batter’s pad or how much of the stumps it was due to strike – the initial decision stands, but the challenging team retain their review.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more
T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

 

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

Drop-in pitch

A pitch prepared away from the venue hosting the game and then ‘dropped in’ ahead of time. The temporary stadium in Nassau, New York, which will host eight games at the T20 World Cup, including India vs Pakistan, has had four drop-in pitches installed.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

Powerplay

During the first six overs of a T20 match – the powerplay – only two fielders are allowed outside the 30-yard circle, theoretically making it easier for the batting side to hit boundaries. For the remaining 14 overs, no more than five fielders are allowed outside the 30-yard circle.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

Finisher

The batter charged with trying to clinch victory for his side. Often this can be by smashing sixes and firing fours but manipulation of the field, quick running and a cool head are also key. Ben Stokes showed all these qualities and more as his innings steered England to victories in the 2019 50-over World Cup on home soil and 2022 T20 World Cup in Australia.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

Death bowling

Towards the end of an innings (the death), bowlers will usually turn to a variety of deliveries as they look to slow down the flow of runs. Straight yorkers (which pitch at the batters’ feet, making it hard for them to get the ball away), wide yorkers (fired outside off stump, forcing batters to reach for the ball) and cutters (slower deliveries) are frequently seen in this period, with India’s Jasprit Bumrah and England’s Jofra Archer two of the best exponents of those skills.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

Jaffa

A term commentators use when a delivery from a bowler is so good that it is almost unplayable. These are what you want to be bowling. Deliveries you don’t want to be bowling are beamers, in which the ball slips out of the bowler’s hand and flies through to the batter around head height without bouncing. These are a complete no-no.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

 

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

Match-up

An oft-used term with the sea of stats gurus teams have at their disposal to tell them which bowling type a batter is weakest against so that they can plan accordingly. Perceived wisdom is that batters find it harder with the ball spinning away from them, so you usually see an off-spinner bowling to a left-hander and a leg-spinner operating to right-handers. England’s Liam Livingstone bowls both off-spin and leg-spin so is a very handy man to have around.

 

Net run-rate

This is used to separate teams on the same number of points during a league format, in the way that goal difference does in football. Net run-rate is the average runs scored by a team in an over minus the average runs scored against them. Needless to say, you want your net run-rate to be as high as possible.

Mankad

One of the most controversial dismissals in cricket, which occurs when a bowler runs out the batter at the non-striker’s end before they deliver the ball if that batter has stepped out of their crease backing up. Named after India’s Vinoo Mankad, who removed Australia’s Bill Brown in this fashion in the 1940s, the dismissal is within the laws of cricket but often deemed against the spirit of the game, unless the batter has previously been warned.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

Reverse sweep/scoop

Cricketers play some mind-bendingly funky shots these days. There is still place for the cover drive, cut, pull and agricultural hack over the leg-side but we also see sweeps and scoops, not just of the orthodox variety. Prepare to witness reverse sweeps and reverse scoops aplenty over the next month as batters switch their stance, batting like a left-hander if they are right-handed and vice versa.

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

 

T20 World Cup jargon buster: Learn about powerplays, finishers, drop-in pitches, DLS, DRS and more

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