The risk-and-reward equation, and why it works for England's Bazball

Despite a lower control percentage than their opponents in most Tests, England have still achieved a 13-4 win-loss record

S Rajesh03-Aug-2023When Zak Crawley reached his hundred during a stunning onslaught on Australia’s bowlers in the fourth Ashes Test at Old Trafford, this is how ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball commentators described the ball off which he reached the milestone:In the end, the Manchester weather denied them a real shot at the Ashes, but that innings from Crawley was the very epitome of everything that defines England’s approach under Bazball. And while 93 balls is an eye-popping number, the other stat in those couple of lines of commentary is just as revealing: when Crawley reached his century, he had a control percentage of 64. Let’s talk a little more about that number.For every ball that a batter faces, ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball scoring team records a binary control metric. This metric records how convincingly a batter played each delivery: all deliveries left alone (without resulting in a dismissal) or middled are marked ; and those where the batter was beaten, got an edge or mistimed a shot are marked . These can also be referred to as false shots played by the batter.A caveat before proceeding any further: all not-in-control deliveries do not have equal wicket-taking potential. A delivery that just misses the outside edge by a whisker is probably more threatening than a ball which induces a mistimed cover-drive, with the ball dribbling harmlessly to the leg side. However, for the purpose of this exercise, both are marked as not-in-control. Over a long innings or a set of innings, this metric gives a fair indication of how assured the batter was at the crease.Crawley’s 64% control at the time of reaching his hundred meant that he mistimed, edged or was beaten 34 times out of the 93 balls he had faced at that point. By the time his innings eventually ended on 189 off 182 balls, his control percentage had improved to 70.88, which means he played 53 false shots. Though the control percentage improved, it was still the sixth-lowest among all centuries since 2013. Given that, on average, a top-order batter plays around 11.1 false shots per dismissal in the last five years, it’s obvious that Crawley had the rub of the green going his way in that innings.However, it is expected that a batter will play more than 11 false shots in a long innings (over a 200-ball innings, even 90% control means 20 false shots). What’s even more interesting is the control numbers for England’s batting unit since they’ve adopted this new approach.Zak Crawley has followed the Bazball template to the T•Getty ImagesUsually, Tests are won by the team which exhibits more control with the bat. In other words, they are won by the bowling team which consistently asks more questions of the opposition batters. Of the 173 Tests which have produced decisive results in the last five years (since August 2018), 123 (71.1%) have gone in favour of the team whose batters had the higher control percentage in the match.That 50 Tests went the other way is illustrative of the quirky nature of the game – a batter could play flawlessly for his first 35 deliveries, but an error off his 36th could result in his dismissal, for a score of, say, 20, and a control percentage of 97.2. An opposition batter in the same game might achieve a control percentage of only 80, but could end up with a century. Extend the corresponding logic to most of the batters of each of those teams, and you could end up with the winning team scoring more runs but having a lower control percentage. Or a team could be going for quick runs aiming for a third-innings declaration, which could result in more false shots.Even with those possibilities, though, in more than 70% of the games which had a result, the team with the higher control ended up as the winner, which suggests a reasonably strong correlation between those two factors.That’s where England’s numbers since Bazball become interesting. They have achieved an enviable 13-4 win-loss record during this period (with one draw), but only in five of those 18 matches have they had a higher control percentage with the bat than their opponent. (A rider at this point, though: the sample sizes are still relatively small, as it’s only a little more than a year since Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes took charge as coach and captain respectively.)