The way batters approach the single tells us there is room for bigger scoring in T20

Can more runs be scored in T20 than at present? It would appear so

Kartikeya Date12-May-2025Scoring rates are higher than a run a ball in T20. In the IPL, a team has scored less than a run a ball without being bowled out 58 times (2.5%) in 2252 team innings (excluding no-result fixtures), and once in the last 552 innings since October 5, 2021.In T20 a dot ball and a single both mean that the batting side has fallen behind the ask. In ODI cricket, this was only true about the dot ball for most of that format’s 54-year history, but scoring rates in ODIs have increased due to changes in the field-setting rules over the last 20 years. Where 300 was once a strong score, it is now merely competitive in comparable conditions. Seven years ago, it was already evident that the single was basically as good as a dot ball in a T20 innings. Today we have not only more data, but a new generation of T20 players – T20 natives if you will – whose records are available for study. What, then, is the future of the single in T20?Deliveries in T20 can be thought of as being of two types. First, there are deliveries on which either boundaries or wickets occur. Let’s call these Type-one deliveries. Second are all other deliveries. Let’s call these Type-two deliveries. Bowlers want sequences of Type-two deliveries to be as long as possible; batters want them to be as short as possible, and for them to end in a boundary rather than a wicket. (And Type-two sequences now end in a wicket 20% of the time, down from about 22% in 2008.) The table below shows the average length of the sequence of Type-two deliveries for batters in positions 1-5 in the order in the IPL, and how often such a sequence ends in a boundary for each season.