Williamson and Karunaratne, two ends of the control spectrum

A deep dive into ESPNcricinfo’s data reveals which of the world’s top batsmen make the fewest errors, and which ones are the luckiest

S Rajesh21-Aug-2019Dimuth Karunaratne’s fourth-innings effort of 122 in Galle was a memorable, matchwinning effort. His knock was instrumental in Sri Lanka chasing down 268 with plenty to spare. In the process, Karunaratne became only the third Sri Lanka opener to score a fourth-innings century, and the fourth Sri Lanka batsman to score one in a win. That he achieved the feat as captain made it even more special.Clearly, no one can dispute the import of that innings. However, those who saw it unfold would also have noticed the number of times the rub of the green went his way. He survived three chances – a drop by BJ Watling on 49, another drop by Tom Latham on 58, and a missed stumping at the same score. Apart from those clear chances, there were several instances when he played and missed, or when he played shots he wasn’t in control of. According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, Karunaratne was in control of only 78.6% of the deliveries he faced in that innings. The corresponding control percentage for the other Sri Lanka batsmen who batted in the fourth innings was 81. Yet, Karunaratne scored 122, while the others collectively scored 139.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe scorecard only recognises runs scored and wickets taken, but it ignores the route taken to make those contributions. Subjectively, we tend to use terms like “flawless” or “chancy” to describe innings that were error-free or error-strewn, but ESPNcricinfo’s control parameter assigns a number to it, by recording, for each ball, whether the batsman was in control or not. It is an interesting stat for an innings, and when calculated over a period of time, it reveals some fascinating trends about batsmen who’ve tended to be luckier – or tended to survive their not-in-control moments. Over the last couple of years, Karunaratne clearly belongs in that category.To begin with, a caveat. The control statistic is recorded as a binary, so a batsman is either in control of a delivery or not. Obviously, some not-in-control deliveries pose more of a wicket threat than others, but in terms of the control statistic, they are recorded the same way. Over a longer period of time, the control factor is usually a good measure of how fluent or chancy an innings was.