Yes, in ODI and T20 cricket, there is a limited amount of overs, regardless of wickets, unless 10 are captured before the 50 overs in ODI or 20 in T20. This is different than test cricket, where all 10 wickets must be captured; otherwise, a draw/NR can be called by the umpires. (AFAIK, may be getting that wrong.Ok, just getting the hang here. Loosely following the World Cup. So, South Africa v. Bangladesh. RSA finished with 382 runs, but only 5 wickets. That is because you only get 50 overs regardless of wickets?
Team B win because they scored more runs (301) than Team A (300) before they lost all 10 wickets. As a batting team, you don't want to lose wickets (unless for real odd situation/circumstances).Then Bangladesh finishes their innings when RSA has taken all 10 wickets, which happens before the completion of 50 overs. So, the final score is expressed as runs, but if the second batting team wins it is expressed as wickets? As in how many they have left? That is confusing as heck.
Let’s say team A scores 300/5. Team B scores 301/9 with two deliveries left in the 50th over. Team B wins even though they took fewer wickets? Or no?
Theoretically, NBs (no balls: balls where the bowler went fully past that line) & wides (balls going past the wicket vertically or past the crease lines) can keep the tally going. Those give the batting team 1 extra run, plus whatever else the batting team can get in that one bowl. For NBs, there's a penalty on the fielding team. Like if the ball is hit into the air, there is no wicket to take, even if it is caught.Also, in the RSA/Bangladesh game, it seemed like there came a point where Bangladesh could not mathematically win. They were behind by over 140 runs in the 47th over. Even with all 6s, they could not catch up. I assume this must be because there are ways to score that don’t count against the 300 allowed deliveries?
While unlikely that RSA would've kept bowling extras/no balls consecutively, something called Net Run Rate (NRR) goes into affect. So B'desh were trying to finish as strong as they could (while RSA were too) to improve their NRR, as it is a tiebreaker in the tournament if multiple teams have the same amount of points on the table.
NRR formula = (average runs / over scored by a team in each game) - (average runs / over scored against them in each game).
Others in this thread are WAY more knowledgeable and experienced in the game than I am. Hope I could help somewhat.
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