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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Net_run_rate
rdf:type
dbo:Software
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Net Run Rate Net run rate
rdfs:comment
Die Net Run Rate (NRR) ist eine Statistik, die im Cricket verwendet wird. Sie dient der Unterscheidung zweier oder mehrerer Mannschaften bei Punktgleichheit in der Tabelle. Die NRR ist allerdings nur in den Spielformen sinnvoll, in denen die Anzahl der Over begrenzt ist, und wird entsprechend auch nur dort verwendet. Im internationalen Cricket sind dies insbesondere One-Day-Internationals und International Twenty20 Spiele, aber beispielsweise nicht Test Matches. Sie entspricht ihrer Bedeutung nach der aus anderen Sportarten, wie Fußball oder Handball, bekannten Tordifferenz. Net run rate (NRR) is a statistical method used in analysing teamwork and/or performance in cricket. It is the most commonly used method of ranking teams with equal points in limited overs league competitions, similar to goal difference in football. A positive NRR means a team is scoring faster than its opposition overall, while a negative NRR means a team is scoring slower than the teams it has come up against. It is therefore desirable for the NRR to be as high as possible.
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dbc:Cricket_terminology dbc:Tie-breaking_in_group_tournaments
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1118182220
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dbr:Subtraction dbr:Weighted_arithmetic_mean dbr:West_Germany_1–0_Austria_(1982_FIFA_World_Cup) dbr:One_Day_International dbr:2013_ICC_Champions_Trophy dbr:1992_Cricket_World_Cup dbr:Additive_inverse dbr:Arithmetic_mean dbr:Limited_overs_cricket dbr:Goal_difference dbc:Cricket_terminology dbr:Cricket_World_Cup dbc:Tie-breaking_in_group_tournaments dbr:Negative_number dbr:Cricket dbr:Association_football dbr:Duckworth-Lewis_method dbr:Run_rate dbr:Over_(cricket) dbr:Dismissal_(cricket) dbr:Duckworth-Lewis dbr:1999_Cricket_World_Cup dbr:Duckworth–Lewis–Stern_method
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Die Net Run Rate (NRR) ist eine Statistik, die im Cricket verwendet wird. Sie dient der Unterscheidung zweier oder mehrerer Mannschaften bei Punktgleichheit in der Tabelle. Die NRR ist allerdings nur in den Spielformen sinnvoll, in denen die Anzahl der Over begrenzt ist, und wird entsprechend auch nur dort verwendet. Im internationalen Cricket sind dies insbesondere One-Day-Internationals und International Twenty20 Spiele, aber beispielsweise nicht Test Matches. Sie entspricht ihrer Bedeutung nach der aus anderen Sportarten, wie Fußball oder Handball, bekannten Tordifferenz. Net run rate (NRR) is a statistical method used in analysing teamwork and/or performance in cricket. It is the most commonly used method of ranking teams with equal points in limited overs league competitions, similar to goal difference in football. The NRR in a single game is the average runs per over that team scores, minus the average runs per over that is scored against them. The NRR in a tournament is the average runs per over that a team scores across the whole tournament, minus the average runs per over that is scored against them across the whole tournament. This is the same as the weighted average of the run rates scored in each match (weighted by the lengths of the innings batted compared to the other innings batted), minus the weighted average of the run rates conceded in each match (weighted by the lengths of the innings bowled compared to the other innings bowled). This is not usually the same as the total or average of the NRRs from the individual matches in the tournament. A positive NRR means a team is scoring faster than its opposition overall, while a negative NRR means a team is scoring slower than the teams it has come up against. It is therefore desirable for the NRR to be as high as possible. NRR has been criticised as hard to understand. Also, while it measures how quickly teams score and concede runs, this is not at all the same as how big the teams' margins of victory or defeat are (as it ignores wickets lost), and so ranking sides by NRR does not rank them by size of victory. This means a team which progresses in a tournament at the expense of another team, due to a higher NRR, may not have truly performed better than their opponents. In the Cricket World Cup, the first use of NRR was in the 1992 edition. Previous editions used run rate instead as the tie-breaker.
gold:hypernym
dbr:Method
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