Friday, 30 December 2016

Cricket World Ratings 31st December 2016

The year comes to an end and England are in fre-fall, having lost their lost four tests, and six of their last eight, including a first ever defeat to Bangladesh.  In their subsequent series against India, the difference in class betweeen the two sides was clear: in the finall test, England made 477 in their first innings and started their second innings with a century stand and still lost by an innings, thanks to a triple century from Karun Nair in only his third test match.  The bowling of Ravindra Jadeja was another stand-out feature of the match (and series); for once, India's captain Virat Kohli was not needed to make a major contribtion.

Eleswhere, Australia have begun their home series against Pakistan with two wins, and likewise, South Africa have seen off Sri Lanka, confirming the pattern of the domianance of Asian teams at home and their relative weakness away. So the latest shape of my world ratings is as follows:

India         183  +9  
South Africa  116 +14  
Australia     109 +27 
Sri Lanka      42 -15   
New Zealand    41    
England        25  -9  
Pakistan       13 -28
West Indies   -58   
Bangladesh   -148    
Zimbabwe     -325

And the official ratings (now relecting India's win over England but not yet the other matches looks as follows):

India        120 +5
Australia    105
Pakistan     102
South Africa 102
England      101 -4
New Zealand   96
Sri Lanka     96
West Indies   69
Bangldesh     65
Zimbabwe       5 

A happy new year to all!



































Monday, 12 December 2016

Cricket World Ratings 12th December 2016

 So, England, nearly top in the world ratings at the end of the summer, one draw away from having beaten every team in the world (at the series level) more recently than they'd lost to them, and now?  You can see from below that in my world ratings, it doesn't look good.  The official world ratings still flatter them for the moment, but a downward adjustment is coming soon.  A first-ever match loss to Bangladesh has been followed by three straight defeats to India, with just a draw in between.  Now India are a fine (and arguably improving) side, playing at home (although the conditions have been less spin-friendly than they might have been).  A defeat, in itself, is no shame (although obviously not the mark of world beaters).  I'd say just one thing: you don't need six bowlers in a test match.  No matter if you have a stack of fine seamers on turning pitches; no matter if your spinners are potentially unreliable; no matter if you've been struggling to find good batsmen.  It seems to me that England have made their own troubles worse by refusing to pick a conventionally balanced side.  The strategy didn't make sense to me (and didn't avoid defeat) in the U.A.E at the end of 2015; and it doesn't make sense now.  At least the promising performances of Hameed and Jennings hint at how England might fill the gaps in their batting order longer term.  But in this tour, one problem has surely been that they haven't been trying to fill enough gaps.

Meanwhile, hats off to India, who've outbowled and outbatted their visitors, in very convincing fashion, and who've now won six of their last seven tests.  It will now be interesting to see if this talented side can do what so many Indian teams of promise have failed to do in the past, and follow up success at home with similar success away.

India         174 +10 
South Africa  102    
Australia      82    
Sri Lanka      57    
New Zealand    41   
Pakistan       41    
England        34 -10  
West Indies   -58   
Bangladesh   -148    
Zimbabwe     -325

Saturday, 3 December 2016

Cricket World Ratings 3rd December 2016

One match has been played in each of three test series since I last updated the blog.  Australia came back to win the dead rubber in their series against South Africa; New Zealand effected a remarkably rapid dismissal of Pakistan in the final session of the two teams' second game to secure a whitewash; while India completed their second successive defeat of England in a five match series they can now no longer lose (in theory, with two matches still to come, England could escape with a draw, although that would indeed be a rather remarkable case of escapology).  A few months ago, Australia, England and Pakistan were all among the teams vying for the position of the number one in the world; now, India seem to be fairly clearly on top, and remakrably, in my world ranking system, Sri Lanka have risen to fourth place, following their walloping of Australia and the subsequent struggles of many of their rivals. Here are rankings in full:

India         164 +12
South Africa  102 -20   
Australia      82 +21
Sri Lanka      57    
England        44 -12  
New Zealand    41 +19
Pakistan       41 -19
West Indies   -58    
Bangladesh   -148    
Zimbabwe     -325

And here are the offical ICC ratings (which don't yet take account of the India v England series, and which in general are more resillient in the face of recent results:

India        115
England      105
Australia    105 -3
Pakistan     102 -7
South Africa 102 +6
New Zealand   96 +5
Sri Lanka     96
West Indies   69
Bangladesh    65
Zimbabwe       5

Nonetheless, it's safe to say it will be a major surprise if England still hold second place after two more tests against India.


Monday, 21 November 2016

Cricket World Ratings 21st November 2016



A lot of cricket has been played in the past few weeks, beginning with a momentous game.  Bangladesh had never previously won a test against opponents more illustrious than the West Indies or Zimbabwe; but on a turning wicket, they only just fell short of England in the first test of the two nation’s two-match series.  Another turner for the second test, and again England, so effective recently on seaming pitches, looked out of their depth as bowlers and players of spin.  This time, Bangladesh were not to be denied; and the team secured a famous win.  Logically, Bangladesh should become a place where cricket can flourish, with a large, and interested, population. This win may perhaps be remembered as an important step on that journey.

England then had to travel to top-ranked India, for an even more demanding challenge.  But they secured the better of a draw in the first test, with big runs for five of their top six batsmen (who had collectively looked out-of-sorts even in the summer in England, and even more so in Bangldesh).  But, admittedly after losing a crucial toss, the home side crushed their visitors in the second game of what will be a five game series.  England may win a game along the way, but, unlike the side that toured India in 2011, this doesn’t look to be a team that can come home with a series win (or even a draw).  India’s status as world number ones looks secure for a while.

Sri Lanka recently provided a shock to the system by delivering a 3-0 walloping to their visitors Australia, who had arrived on tour with the number one rating that now belongs to India; they’ve followed this up with a pair of unsurprising victories over Zimbabwe. Very briefly, in between, Pakistan grabbed the number one spot (there are a lot of teams quite close in terms of ability at the moment).  But after beating the West Indies in the first two matches that the two teams had played, they lost the final game, and have now made a losing start to their tour of New Zealand. So one-by-one, India’s rivals for the top spot appear to be falling away.

Even more strikingly, Australia have started their home series against South Africa with two more crushing defeats, meaning that the team have now been thrashed five matches in succession.  In 1984 the team lost six straight games to the then-mighty West Indies; this time, it’s harder to see an excuse.  Since early last year, a lot of fine players have retired from the Australian team: batsmen Michael Clarke and Chris Rogers, wicket keeper Brad Haddin, all-rounder Shane Watson plus the team’s erratic talisman, pace-man Mitchell Johnson; but new captain Steve Smith took over from Clarke and looked ruthless in defeating New Zealand and the West Indies.  Suddenly, however, the team looks very fragile.  Of course, we’re talking about an awful couple of months, and perhaps Australia will put this run behind them and it will be remembered primarily as a statistical curiosity.  But it’s potentially very bad for morale, and the fear will be that the conveyor of talent, which has run full for Australia for 25 years, might finally be empty. As an Englishman, however, I’m not making that call yet.

 So my method for rating the teams currently assesses them in this order:

India         152  +8  
South Africa  122 +32  
Australia      61 -32  
Pakistan       60 -59   
Sri Lanka      57  +5  
England        56 -38 
New Zealand    22 +22   
West Indies   -58 +37  
Bangladesh   -148 +29 
Zimbabwe     -325  -5

And Bangldesh's first win over a top seven country takes them to their highest ever score.  On the other hand, Zimbabwe's -325 is a record low for any side ever.  The ICC method, which only counts series upon their conclusion, currently rates the sides as follows:

India        115
Pakistan     109  -2
Australia    108
England      105  -3
South Africa  96
Sri Lanka     96  +1
New Zealand   91
West Indies   69  +2
Bangladesh    65  +8
Zimbabwe       5  -3

The normal caveat, that the numbers are not directly comparable, still applies























































Tuesday, 25 October 2016

Cricket World Ratings 25/10/2016

Bangladesh have been playing test cricket since 1999.  In that time, they've found it hard to schedule test matches, especially against the big teams; and even harder to beat them.  Their only victories have come against Zimbabwe and the West Indies, the two other weakest teams in cricket's pecking order.  But they've just come within a whisker of beating England in an exceptionally well-balanced test match.  Of course, they've had home advantage, and it was the first test of England's tour, but still, the side has had a number of notable results in one-day cricket, and have sufficient talent that eventually a win will come.  But not quite yet.  The narrowness of the result, however, does point to the fact that although England came within a whisker of becomong the number one ranked team at the end of the English summer, the side really has a number of weaknesses which could be exposed badly when they visit India after their matches in Bangladesh.  When England were last number one in the world in 2011, they had a strong seam bowling roster and a run-laden lower middle order, both of which the current side has as well.  But back then, they also had an in-form top order, class spin bowling options and a well-respected wicket-keeper, all of which are absent from their current line up (though the oft-derided Bairstow actually had a good game behind the stumps in their latest match.  Still, it would be a bold person who at this stage bet on an away win when England go to India.

Meanwhile, the West Indies have (yet again) lost a match (to Pakistan, for the second time in their series) in spite of a valliant rearguard; but give away too many first innings runs and you're always going to be against the wall.  Neither of these results have much effect on my my form of world ratings, which measure performances against expectations; and so the current ratings look as follows:

India         144    
Pakistan      109 +8  
England        94 +5 
Australia      93    
South Africa   90    
Sri Lanka      52    
New Zealand     0    
West Indies   -85 -8  
Bangladesh   -177 -5  
Zimbabwe     -320

Monday, 17 October 2016

Cricket World Ratings 17th October 2016

 It's hard for teams from outside the Indian sub-continent to win there (and also vice-versa); with India and Pakistan currently playing home series, they are rising in cricket's world ratings.  One can note that Pakistan's home matches are actually played (due to security concerns in their actual homeland) in Arabia; but the pitches in the U.A.E. are quite subcontinental in character.  In fact, in spite of scoring almost 600 runs for the loss of only three wickets in their first innings, Pakistan only beat the West Indies on the last day by the relatively narrow margin of 56 runs.  India, meanwhile, were too strong for New Zealand and sent their visitors packing 3-0.  A small oddity: New Zealand now have a rating of (almost) exactly zero, i.e. they're as strong as the mean strength.  But this number is accounted for in part due to the relatively awful scores of Banglasdesh and Zimbabwe; six teams rate more strongly then New Zealand, and only three weaker.

India         144 +10  
Pakistan      101  +8  
Australia      93    
South Africa   90    
England        89    
Sri Lanka      52   
New Zealand     0 -10 
West Indies   -77  -8   
Bangladesh   -172    
Zimbabwe     -320

Meanwhile, the official world ratings have caught up with my system and India have leapfrogged Pakistan to take the top spot, although the Pakistan-West Indies game I mentioned previously will only be included here once that series is complete.

India         115 +5
Pakistan      111
Australia     108
England       108
South Africa   96
Sri Lanka      95
New Zealand    91 -4
West Indies    67
Bangladesh     57
Zimbabwe        8

Tuesday, 4 October 2016

Cricket World Ratings 4th October 2016

As the English summer drew to a close, four teams were in contention for the top position in cricket's world ratings: England, Pakistan, India and Australia.  The latter had held the top spot, but lost it after an unexpected drubbing in Sri Lanka.  When Pakistan beat England in the final test of their series, they went top in the official ratings; but in my system, it was India who grabbed the lead.  Now, however, India have beaten New Zealand for two tests in a row, guaranteeing a series win (there's just one game still to come).  The official ratings won't be updated until the series has ended, but it's already a certainty that India (even if the last match is lost) will gain sufficient points to end Pakistan's brief reign.  Pakistan have only ever been rated first once before (in 1988) and that was for a similarly brief interval. In my system, where India were already top, they've increased their margins, and the list now looks as follows:

India         134 +12
Australia      93    
Pakistan       93    
South Africa   90    
England        89    
Sri Lanka      52    
New Zealand    10 -12   
West Indies   -69    
Bangladesh   -172   
Zimbabwe     -320

And the very narrow lead that India had held is now starting to grow.  There's a lot more cricket to be payed before Christmas, but that includes more home test matches for India.  The safest bet is that India will further boost their lead, although the four teams who remain within a whisker of one another behind them will all have ambitions.  England's games against Bangladesh are among the next to come.

Wednesday, 28 September 2016

Cricket World Ratings 28th September 2016

New  Zeland is a small country, and their cricket team is usually dependent, even at its best, on a small number of exceptional players, such as their current leading batsman, Kane Williamson.  India is the most populous cricket-playing country, and their team is currently top of my cricket world rankings (though Pakistan still lead the initial list).  Williamson predictably made some runs in the first test of New Zealand's current tour of India, but equally predictably, it wasn't enough, and a ten-wicket haul for Ashwin helped India to a victory by almost 200 runs.  It's the first of a series of tests that India will play at home this winter: the net result could be that they strengthen their position on top of my ratings, and take the lead in the official rankings too, as neither system makes any allowances for home advantage.  Here's my latest rankings: the second test (of three) begins in a couple of days.

India         122 +12 
Australia      93    
Pakistan       93    
South Africa   90    
England        89    
Sri Lanka      52    
New Zealand    22 -12  
West Indies   -69    
Bangladesh   -172    
Zimbabwe     -320

Monday, 5 September 2016

Cricket World Ratings 5th September 2016

Dale Steyn has been the world's best fast bowler for the past decade.  But recently, injury has interrupted his career, and he's at the age where a fast bowler typically nears the end of his usefulness.  Thus every hiccup might now be seen as a harbinger of the end.  But he may not be finished yet.  After South Africa's first test against New Zealand was rained off, Steyn was instrumental in winning the second for his side, taking 10 wickets in the match.  It's a good win for South Africa as well, following disastrous series in India and at home against England, which saw the team fall precipitously from their previous spot as world number 1.

The effect of this win on my version of cricket's world ratings is to improve South Africa's standing at the expense of England's, although it's all very close:

India         110   
Australia      93    
Pakistan       93   
South Africa   90 +15  
England        89    
Sri Lanka      52    
New Zealand    34 -16  
West Indies   -69   
Bangladesh   -172    
Zimbabwe     -320

By way of comparison, here are the current ICC world ratings following the conclusion of New Zealand's visit to South Africa:

Pakistan      111
India         110
Australia     108
England       108
South Africa   96
Sri Lanka      95
New Zealand    95
West Indies    67
Bangladesh     57
Zimbabwe        8
  
Under the ICC system, New Zealand actually held 5th place before this defeat.  The results bring the ICC system into better concordance with mine, the main difference being the higher ranking that Pakistan claim in the official ratings.  But their hold on first place may not last for long.  Unless New Zealand can defy expectation on their forthcoming tour of India, the home team may well soon be in first place in both sets of ratings.  

Tuesday, 23 August 2016

Cricket World Ratings 23/8/2016



There’s been a lot of action in international cricket recently: every team with the exception of Bangladesh has been in action, and with the effect of a change in the rating order.  Since I started keeping track of test match cricket results using an Elo-style system, most of the matches played have ended in fairly predictable outcomes, but some of the recent matches have produced some surprises.  The first big shock came in Australia’s tour of Sri Lanka.  After a run of 11 undefeated games helped put Australia into first place both in my rankings and the official world ratings, Sri Lanka won all three tests in their recent contest.  This is all the more remarkable as Sri Lanka have a wretched record against Australia in general – in fact, prior to this series, they’d only won one test against them ever (and they’ve been playing test cricket since 1982).  In the first match, young batsmen Mendis (who was promising in the side’s recent tour of England) and veteran spinner Herath helped deliver a victory as the team recovered from an appalling start.  In the second game, Herath even took a hat-trick, while his colleague Perera collected most wickets overall.  The third test was more competitive but the eventual result less surprising.  Even at their peak, Australia have often looked weak in the Indian subcontinent, but these to lose three times in a row is poor for a side that had been beginning to assert itself at the head of cricket’s pecking order.  And indeed, Australia’s erstwhile dominance was not so strong that it could necessarily be presumed to withstand such results.

And for a while, it wasn’t clear which of three other teams might take Australia’s lead.  India could cement that position with a good win over the West Indies, but (because of the West Indies’ poor rating) needed a convincing set of results.  If England could see off Pakistan, the team would actually have beaten every other test side more recently than they’d lost to them, and would go top.  But a drawn series, or a series win for Pakistan, could have allowed Pakistan to take the top spot if India failed to win by a sufficiently convincing margin.  This whole blog is about my alternative system for ranking teams, and under this system, the calculations are slightly different; but it’s a fairly clear fact that no team is dominant in test match cricket right now, meaning that the top place would be subject to contest under any reasonable system.

And India’s hopes might have seemed to have been fading as their series against the West Indies unfurled.  They’d won the first test, and in the second, wickets from Ashwin (one of a number of contenders for the title of the world’s best bowler right now), and runs for Rahul and Rahane, saw India into a commanding position; but Roston Chase, who’d previously taken five wickets, scored a splendid undefeated century to secure a draw for the home side.  In the third test, the West Indies made a good start, and, although their position weakened, rain looked as if it may have saved them.  In the event, India sealed a win to take a 2-0 series lead, and to retain their own chances of taking the number one spot.  But rain wiped out the final test, restricting India's opportunities to gain in the ratings.

There were no shocks in New Zealand’s tour of Zimbabwe, where the visitors have won the first two tests by a crushing margin (thought this has little effect on the top of the rankings). New Zealand have since headed south to South Africa, where the first test was rained off.  Just one more test awaits in this series. 

England and Pakistan’s battle as arguably been more interesting: the third test saw the hosts recover from a poor start through a fine team effort, but in the fourth, the Pakistanis took control again and England count not return.  England’s eventual defeat saw the series drawn 2-2, and, as Pakistan won when the two teams last met, England’s hopes of a clean sweep of pairwise victories dashed.  England have many talented players (especially all-rounders) but a chronic shortage of frontline batsmen: in the series, five Pakistani specialist batsmen have made scores in excess of 70, whereas just Cook and Root have managed this among England’s supposed lead batsmen.  As spin bowling is another England weakness, and a tour to India awaits, it could be a while before England get another chance to go top.  As for Pakistan, their batting hero of the first test was 42 year-old Misbah ul-Haq, while in the final test, a double century was scored by 38 year-old Younis Khan.  It’s probably the last time we’ll see this pair on a cricket ground in England, but they depart on a high.

One issue which I have not extensively discussed yet on this blog is home advantage.   Has Australia lost to Sri Lanka at home that would have been an even more dramatic shock; Pakistan will be delighted to have drawn in England; India have a long series of home games coming up which represent a good opportunity to assert themselves in first position.  Players tend to develop the skills needed to flourish under the conditions they most often face; the advantage of playing at home is substantial. Though I haven’t done the maths, it’s possible that identifying which side is playing at home is as good an indicator of the eventual result of a game as any complex analysis of prior results. One certainly might seek to build this factor into a system, although neither my system nor the official one takes account of this at present.

So, after all this action, how do the teams rate?  Firstly, under my system, the current ratings are as follows:

India         110  -3      

Australia      93 -73         

Pakistan       93  +2        

England        89  -2         

South Africa   75  -1        

Sri Lanka      52 +73        

New Zealand    50  +7         

West Indies   -69 +15      

Bangladesh   -172      

Zimbabwe     -320  -5

While under the official system, India went top for 5 days, but after their final match against the West Indies was rained off, Pakistan nudged ahead of them:

Pakistan      111

India         110

Australia     108

England       108

New Zealand    99

Sri Lanka      95

South Africa   92

West Indies    67

Bangladesh     57

Zimbabwe        8

So there is actually a difference between the answers produced by the two systems, although both agree that there isn’t much to choose between the top sides.  The similarity of the absolute ratings, however, is wholly accidental, although it’s worth noting that India’s current rating of 110 (in my system) is one of the lowest ratings ever for a team in first place: the last time that the best rating was this low was in 1999, when South Africa and Australia were jousting for the number 1 spot (and when Bangladesh were not yet a test team, which is important, as the ratings are adjusted so that the mean strength is zero).  One way of looking at this is that we’re currently lacking any great test sides.  But another view is that the top rung of international cricket has rarely been this competitive, with very little to choose between the top four teams in particular. Still India, with their forthcoming home series, have to be the favourites to be on top in a few months time.

Tuesday, 26 July 2016

Cricket World Ratings 26/7/2016


There are three interesting series taking place at the moment.  Most interesting, perhaps, is England's attempt to exploit home advantage and take revenge on Pakistan, who defeated them last winter.  England and Pakistan are clearly two of the world's top five teams right now.  Indeed, after Pakistan won the first test, and England the second, the two have converged on exactly the same ranking.  Both teams have only a few form batsmen: England won the second test after their two stars, Cook and Root, came good, the latter with a double hundred.  England have the better seam attack, but Pakistan's Yasir Shah is clearly the best spinner (indeed, after he took 10 wickets in the first test, he displaced England's Anderson as the world's highest ranked bowler). With two tests still to come, there's still a lot to play for, although right now England look favourites.

The other battles are less interesting.  Australia start their visit to Sri Lanka with a ranking 187 points higher than their hosts; India have a ranking 205 points better than the West Indies.  In each case, the weaker team is at home, but these are big margins.  The nice thing about an Elo-style rating system is that these margins actually mean something, and what a difference of 205 means is an expected value of 0.805 for India per game - or in effect, a prediction of a 4-1 victory in a 5 game series.  India have duly won the first test by a big margin, with Virat Kohli scoring (like Root for England) a double hundred, and wickets for Ravichandran Ashwin (who has therbey successed Yasir at the top of the bowling rankings after only one match).  The series prediction looks pretty good right right now: the home side (who won the T20 world cup this winter) are surely capable of winning a test, but a West Indian victory in the series would be remarkable (and might have been thought of as such even before this disastrous start).

Australia begin against Sri Lanka today; the inexperienced Sri Lankans, recently defeated by England, may also find home advantage inadequate.

So here are the latest rankings.  England have gained more from beating Pakistan than India have gained from their well-expected victory. But the next few weeks could see quite a lot of movement as all three series progress.

Australia     166    
India         123  +7 
England        91 +19 
Pakistan       91 -19  
South Africa   76    
New Zealand    43    
Sri Lanka     -21   
West Indies   -82  -7   
Bangladesh   -172    
Zimbabwe     -315