
What’s a Good Batting Average in Club Cricket?
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About this listen
In this episode of Cricket Matters, we dive into a topic that’s close to every batter’s heart: what actually counts as a good batting average in club cricket? We crunch the numbers, challenge the myths, and share a reality check that every aspiring player needs to hear.
You’ll Learn:
- Why averages alone don’t tell the full story. We explore how focusing only on your batting average can be misleading and why it’s crucial to consider 50+ scores and conversion rates for a true performance assessment.
- What elite player stats reveal about consistency. James breaks down test, ODI, and T20 data from cricket legends like Tendulkar, Kohli, and Joe Root to show how often even the greats “fail”—and what that means for club players.
- How to benchmark yourself as a club cricketer. You’ll get a data-driven framework for what a “good” batting performance looks like depending on your role in the lineup, from opener to tail-ender.
- The mindset shift needed for performance improvement. We unpack why many club cricketers overrate themselves based on one good knock and how to take ownership of your form with honesty and data.
Key Takeaways:
- 50+ scores are more important than average alone. A high average can be inflated by not-outs or low-pressure runs. What really matters is how often you’re converting starts into match-defining scores.
- Even the greatest cricketers get out a lot. Legends like Sachin Tendulkar and Ricky Ponting scored 50+ runs in only about 35% of innings. That means failing 65% of the time is still elite performance.
- Joe Root and Virat Kohli are statistical outliers. Their incredible consistency, with nearly 50% of innings over 50 runs, puts them on a level unmatched even among the top 10 run-scorers of all time.
- Club performance must be evaluated across 10 innings. One-off big scores don’t prove form. Patterns over 10 innings give a clearer picture of who’s performing—and who just got lucky.
- Your division should reflect your performance level. If you’re averaging 80 but playing low-division cricket, you’re not being challenged. Conversely, low scores at high levels may mean it’s time to regroup.
Quotes:
“In cricket, the stats don’t lie—and they don’t lie over time.”
“Everyone remembers their 74, but forgets their 12 and 3.”
“Batting average without conversion stats is only half the story.”
Find James on:
- Instagram: @jamesbreese
- Twitter: @_jamesbreese
To learn more about Cricket Matters and download your FREE copy of The High-Performance Handbook, please visit www.cricketmatters.com
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