The result in cricket

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The result in a game of cricket may be a win for one of the two teams playing, a draw or a tie. Which of these results applies, and how the result is expressed is governed by Law 21 of the Laws of cricket.

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Win

The aim of cricket is to score more runs than the opposing team. A run is scored when both batsmen run 22 yards from one end of a cricket pitch to the other. Runs are also scored when the cricket ball goes over the boundary rope. Penalty runs may also be conceded, although in international Test cricket this is very uncommon.

Cricket is played over either one or two innings. In a two-innings game, the side which has scored a total of runs in excess of that scored in the two completed innings of the opposing side shall win the match. In a one-innings game, the side which has scored in its one innings a total of runs in excess of that scored by the opposing side in its one completed innings shall win the match.

The umpires do have the power to award a match to one side where the other side either concedes defeat or in the opinion of the umpires refuses to play, but the power is very rarely used. Before this rule was brought in there had been incidents in the international arena where one team has refused to play, or deliberately stopped playing for a while. One such incident was when Sri Lanka temporarily stopped play against England when Muttiah Muralitharan was called for throwing by umpire Darryl Hair.

Tie

The result of a match is a Tie when the scores are equal at the conclusion of play, but only if the side batting last has completed its innings (i.e. all the batsmen are out, play is terminally stopped by weather or bad light or, in limited-overs cricket, the set number of overs has been played). This is unusual, and in the history of Test cricket has only happened twice:

Draw

The result of a match is a Draw if a match is concluded, as defined in Law 16, without being a Win or a Tie.

In practice, this means that a Draw most often occurs when a team does not complete its innings. In matches where the number of overs is not limited, therefore, a team in a hopeless position can 'save the draw' by managing not to complete its final innings (i.e. by having batsmen left at the end of play who are 'not out'): the matchi is then drawn regardless of the total of runs accumulated by either side.

Statement of result

If the side batting last wins the match without losing all its (ten) wickets, the result shall be stated as a win by the number of wickets still then to fall. I.e., if Team A bat first and make 200 runs, then Team B make 201 after losing five batsmen, Team B is said to have won by five wickets (regardless of how many batsmen Team A lost during their innings).

(If the side batting last has lost all its wickets but, as the result of an award of 5 penalty runs at the end of the match, has scored a total of runs in excess of the total scored by the opposing side, the result shall be stated as a win to that side by Penalty runs.)

If the side fielding last wins the match, the result shall be stated as a win by runs. I.e., if Team A bat first and make 200 runs, but Team B make only 192, Team A is said to have won by eight runs.

If the match is decided by one side conceding defeat or refusing to play, the result shall be stated as Match Conceded or Match Awarded, as the case may be.

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