Jump to content

Single (cricket): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
needs references. link to Single (baseball).
m Disambiguating links to Batsman (link changed to Batter (cricket)) using DisamAssist.
Line 1: Line 1:
{{unreferenced|date=November 2008}}
{{unreferenced|date=November 2008}}


In the [[sport]] of [[cricket]], a '''single''' is scored when the [[batsmen|batsman]] take one [[run (cricket)|run]], either following a successful [[Batting (cricket)|shot]] (with the run attributed to the on-strike batsman) or when running for a [[bye (cricket)|bye]] or [[leg bye]] (counted as an [[extra (cricket)|extra]]).
In the [[sport]] of [[cricket]], a '''single''' is scored when the [[Batter (cricket)|batsman]] take one [[run (cricket)|run]], either following a successful [[Batting (cricket)|shot]] (with the run attributed to the on-strike batsman) or when running for a [[bye (cricket)|bye]] or [[leg bye]] (counted as an [[extra (cricket)|extra]]).


Unlike when a [[boundary (cricket)|boundary]] is hit (and the run are scored even if the batsmen don't leave their [[crease (cricket)|creases]]), scoring a single requires the batsmen to physically run between the [[wicket]]s. This introduces the risk of being [[run out]], so effective communication between the batsmen is vital. If one batsman attempts to run and the other stays put, then a humiliating run out is likely, but quick and well attuned batsmen may be able to run "quick singles" when other batsmen wouldn't. In general, singles are much easier to score when the [[fielding (cricket)|field]] is set further out, but bringing more fielders in makes it easier for the on-strike batsman to hit boundaries.
Unlike when a [[boundary (cricket)|boundary]] is hit (and the run are scored even if the batsmen don't leave their [[crease (cricket)|creases]]), scoring a single requires the batsmen to physically run between the [[wicket]]s. This introduces the risk of being [[run out]], so effective communication between the batsmen is vital. If one batsman attempts to run and the other stays put, then a humiliating run out is likely, but quick and well attuned batsmen may be able to run "quick singles" when other batsmen wouldn't. In general, singles are much easier to score when the [[fielding (cricket)|field]] is set further out, but bringing more fielders in makes it easier for the on-strike batsman to hit boundaries.

Revision as of 09:28, 21 April 2018

In the sport of cricket, a single is scored when the batsman take one run, either following a successful shot (with the run attributed to the on-strike batsman) or when running for a bye or leg bye (counted as an extra).

Unlike when a boundary is hit (and the run are scored even if the batsmen don't leave their creases), scoring a single requires the batsmen to physically run between the wickets. This introduces the risk of being run out, so effective communication between the batsmen is vital. If one batsman attempts to run and the other stays put, then a humiliating run out is likely, but quick and well attuned batsmen may be able to run "quick singles" when other batsmen wouldn't. In general, singles are much easier to score when the field is set further out, but bringing more fielders in makes it easier for the on-strike batsman to hit boundaries.

Singles usually rotate the strike in a partnership, but because the bowling end changes at the end of an over, singles deliberately only taken at the end of an over are used by quality batsmen to keep the strike when they are batting with the tail-enders, who are unlikely to survive for long against quality bowling and whom an experienced batsman will normally try to protect.

See also