Who will win the 2019 World Cup?

By Aanirudh Kheterpal / Roar Rookie

The ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 is going to be a global cricket festival that will feature the world’s top ten cricketing nations battling for ultimate glory.

What makes it even more exciting is the round-robin format, which ensures that each team plays the rest at least once.

This means that the underdogs Afghanistan and resurgent West Indians will have more than a decent chance to create major upsets. Deciding the eventual winners, especially with more than 11 months to the event, may seem a far-fetched idea.

However, the statistics present a more straightforward interpretation.

The English soil has produced the most number of runs in the last two years, more than any other country in fact. The high scoring nature of English pitches of late puts great emphasis on the ability to score big runs quickly, and at the same time contain the opposition and take wickets.

In order to predict the winner of the World Cup, let us take the following statistics from the last two years (against top ten teams) into account:

1. Batting averages per wicket

2. Batting strike rates

3. Bowling averages

4. Bowling strike rates

5. Bowling economy rates

First, let us use the product of the batting averages per wicket and the batting strike rates to calculate the BAI (Batting Index), which will rank the teams according to their batting in the last two years.

Then, the product of the of the bowling averages, strike rates and economy rates will be calculated and will be designated as BOI (Bowling Index). This metric will rank the teams according to their bowling in the last two years.

Finally, the BAI will be divided by the BOI, to produce a final number for each team which would be referred to as the Winner’s Metric. The team that produces the highest winner’s metric will statistically have the perfect recipe to lift the Cricket World Cup 2019.

1) Batting average per wicket
Despite England’s phenomenal one-day transformation since the last World Cup, India still have the highest batting average of 46.88 per wicket in the last two years. South Africa are surprisingly close to England on this metric, considering how good England have looked in recent times.

Australia seems to be struggling with run-scoring, probably due to the absence of Steven Smith and David Warner. Meanwhile, Afghanistan’s rapid rise, it seems, can only be attributed to their splendid spin bowling; their meagre batting average of 23.85 tells us that they cannot compete with the likes of England and India.

2) Batting strike rate
It is no surprise that England leads this metric with an astounding strike rate of 98.57. Such has been the scale of their ODI transformation, that they have built a team culture that involves a fearless and carefree batting approach.

(Photo by Scott Barbour/Getty Images)

South Africa have been the second quickest scorers in the last two years. While this is an admirable achievement, it is important to remember that the absence of AB De Villiers is likely to change this.

Batting index (BAI)
The product of the batting average and batting strike rate gives us the BAI (Batting Index), which ranks teams on their batting in the last two years. India is a clear winner in this metric, significantly better than what now seems like an overrated English side.

It is true that English cricket has changed over the last two years. However, their carefree approach to batting has caused their batting averages to come down, as they are losing too many wickets in the process.

While it can be argued that the method seems to be working remarkably for English cricket, it is essential to remember that they only seem to be winning against sides of lower quality. This includes the recent 6-0 drubbing again Australia.

If you were to cast your mind back in time to England’s last series against India in India, their ‘see-ball-hit-ball’ approach did manage to produce scores of 350 and 366. However, despite India being 63-4 at one stage, they still managed to chase the former total!

England’s scorching run over the last two years may only be a partially tested affair. The current series against India is likely to clear any doubts.

3) Bowling average and strike rates
This statistical investigation is starting to get spicy now, with Afghanistan presenting an excellent case for themselves; they have a standout bowling average of 24.03 and strike rate of 33.5.

While this may involve only eight matches, one cannot help but think about the havoc that Rashid Khan and his spinners will wreak for spin-struggling English, Australian and South African sides.

(AAP Image/David Mariuz)

After Afghanistan though, India has the best bowling average of 30.11 and strike rate of 35.1.

This can largely be attributed not only to their newfound spin twins Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav, but also an excellent crop of fast bowlers that knows how to contain runs and create pressure.

4) Bowling economy rates
Afghanistan is the only team with an economy rate under 5. In fact, their spinners have managed to maintain an astounding economy rate of 4.13, compared to the next highest 5.13 from India.

While it can be argued that they haven’t been tested against tough opposition, there isn’t a huge difference in skill between Rashid/Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Chahal/Kuldeep.

The importance of containing runs in high scoring games is pivotal and will determine the outcome of the tournament. This is where England have a problem. They can score big runs with the bat, but need their bowlers to step up and back up the good work done by the batsmen.

Bowling metric (BOI)
Afghanistan leads the Bowling Index with an astounding score of 3453, nearly two thousand smaller than the next best India at 5421. This is why I’d like to call them the dark horse of the World Cup i.e. the Croatia of cricket.

A majority of Afghanistan’s bowling success boils down to the ability of their spinners to take wickets. If batsmen continue to fail to pick them, then Afghanistan have a decent chance of making it to the knockout stages.

This might sound a bit over-ambitious, but such feats have been achieved by sides in the past too. For instance, Bangladesh knocked out England in the the 2015 edition of the World Cup.

The next best bowling team behind Afghanistan is Virat Kohli’s India. With two potent wicket-taking and death bowlers in the form of Bhuvneswar Kumar and Jasprit Bumrah, a smart all-rounder in Hardik Pandya and spin twins Chahal and Kuldeep, India have an extremely balanced bowling line-up that can attack and defend while chipping in with wickets at any stage of the game.

(AP Photo/Rui Vieira)

However, their only problem remains their middle order muddle, which includes their sixth bowling option. Going in without backup in such important games is not an option, and at this stage, India seem to be unsettled regarding who their extra bowling option should be.

The winner’s metric
After extensive statistical analysis and number crunching, a conclusion has been arrived upon.

New Zealand come out with a winners metric of 0.38, which shows they only have a small chance of emerging victorious. While their bowling may have been decent, it is their batting that is severely letting them down with inconsistency and unpredictability.

Pakistan’s incredible Champions trophy win in England has been followed by a characteristically long string of inconsistent performances. This is just Pakistan being Pakistan.

While they may have a potent batting line-up and superb bowlers in the form of Mohammad Amir and Hasan Ali, they have lacked a key ingredient to success, which is consistency. They rode their luck in the Champions Trophy – considering there were only three group stage games to play – but things would be difficult for Pakistan this time around with seven games to play before reaching the knockout berth.

Afghanistan need some more exposure to be competitive at the highest level of cricket. While some hopefuls would back their bowling to stun the world’s best, their batting needs to improve to support their spin-heavy bowling line-up.

Australia is a tricky case. We must remember that they are defending the trophy they earned is 2015 with a dominating performance against the Blackcaps in the final. Warner and Smith are likely to return and rescue the Tim Paine led team, and given the strength of their fast bowling, you can give them a chance to regain their trophy.

This leaves us with the top three contenders: England, South Africa and India. England and South Africa both have winner’s metrics of 0.53. While they both look like deep and explosive batting sides, their bowling has been an area of weakness. In addition to this, their ability to handle spin is slightly questionable.

Above all the teams participating this World Cup, there remains one with a standout Winners Metric of 0.81. This is a stunning 0.28 more than anyone else.

Statistically, India are front-runners to be the eventual winners.

India have been the most phenomenal team when it comes to balance between bat and bowl. Their top three has been ruthless, and their bowlers consistent. They can score big runs, they can take wickets and they can contain the opposition.

If there is one chink in India’s armour, it is their middle order and their sixth bowling option. But with the depth of Indian cricket today, you would expect Kohli and company to plug this hole with more than 11 months left for the tournament.

The Crowd Says:

2019-06-29T10:35:12+00:00

svp

Guest


See who is in top 4... for the people who said india will not be in Semi..India havent lost a match yet...

AUTHOR

2018-08-26T22:04:54+00:00

Aanirudh Kheterpal

Roar Rookie


Kopu Sharma, either you really lack knowledge, or have some personal grudges. How can you give Australia a 40% chance of winning compared to South Africa? And how does Pakistan have a greater chance that India! I don't want to waste my time even arguing this.

AUTHOR

2018-08-26T22:00:47+00:00

Aanirudh Kheterpal

Roar Rookie


Dexter the Hamster, that was a magnificent delivery. Full stop.

2018-07-26T09:56:59+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


West Indies are a team, that if they apply their T20 skill and enthusiasm to the 50 over game, there is enough talent there for them to do well at next years world cup. I think Australia is already a write off. My pick would be New Zealand

2018-07-25T05:31:17+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


I agree with Jay's views.

2018-07-25T05:02:22+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


England are overrated.

2018-07-22T15:19:05+00:00

kopa shamsu

Guest


others are more weaker and one dimensional. Not to mention smith warner will be back.Meanwhile Aussies will have chance to test their bench strength. TBH, i am not actually disappointed with autralia's performance in India and england in ODI format being autralia's less than half hearted effort.I was more looking at individual's performance who were able to put aussie on top in different points of those matches only to give it way. When you are talking about WC,all of those individuals will come together. As for india,i don't see them reaching semi.Pakistan will have more chance.

2018-07-22T11:39:43+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Almost all complete nonsense, well done.

2018-07-22T09:31:22+00:00

Noah Barling

Roar Pro


aus and ind should swap. we certainly don't have 40% chance of winning.

2018-07-22T01:04:47+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


One other advantage England will have, along with Pakistan, is playing 50 over cricket in the build-up. The rest of the nations shut down for the IPL. England can play a 5 game series with Pakistan, and have their next best focus on domestic ListA games. Everyone else will get a couple of warm-up games to acclimatise to England and re-acclimatise to 50 over cricket. I wonder if that is another reason for BCCI and CA wanting to shut the world off from the world cup? It gives more group games to find form (as well more guaranteed India games meaning more revenue).

2018-07-21T18:19:05+00:00

JayG

Guest


I don't know if cut above the rest is true.. It only takes 1 bad game in a knockout to push a "favorite" out of the competition and while both England and India are good, neither is infallible - and neither is quite in the same league as the very dominant Aussie team of the last decade. My hypothesis that England have a risky strategy with Batdeep. Essentially they have 10 batters, 5 of who can bowl. If they cannot make a high score, its game over. This strategy works when, like now, a large majority of their batters are in form and thrashing oppositions. However, a year is a long time. If (when) these "allrounders" are out of form, the one-dimensional strategy has a high risk of being reduced to a 0 dimensional strategy. India has a major hole in their middle order similar to Australia. India is just able to paper over it much better because their top three are in form and Virat Kohli is phenomenally consistent. However, 3 batsmen cannot win you a World Cup since there will inevitably be days they will fail. India needs to plug their middle order hole - and fast. I am far from sure that it will be a England v India final. In fact, I am willing to bet that at least one of them won't make the final.

2018-07-21T14:38:08+00:00

JayG

Guest


Something tells me this article is something like the expert predictions for a Germany v Brazil World Cup soccer final this year

2018-07-21T07:44:46+00:00

G Boycott's mum

Guest


These stats are devoid of context and thus meaningless. I believe the rankings as they stand are as food a guide as any. England favourites at home, followed by India. SA and NZ possibles with OZ a dark horse depending on how well the old guns come back. India were beaten fairly convincingly by England where the tournament is being staged and barely put away NZ (typically poor against spin) in an ODI series at home. India's bowling despite being well rounded isn't quite the force it is outside the subcontinent and on good decks their lack of batting depth (no one in good form below Kohli) will count against them I feel.

2018-07-21T06:05:21+00:00

Rats

Guest


India with their current middle order problem and Dhoni not retiring, automatically become non-favourites

2018-07-21T02:36:22+00:00

AREH

Roar Guru


You would've thought for England given ODI form in the last 12 months, their power packed batting lineup and the home advantage, anything less than making the final would be a failure.

2018-07-21T02:04:09+00:00

Brian

Guest


Australia will be up there. How many times has Starc played for us in ODIs of late, and at full fitness? There will also be the redemption factor with Smith and Warner, and Finch has turned himself into an all time great t20 player and a wonderful ODI batsman. Gotta make tough choice in regards to Head, Paine, and maybe Stoinis.

2018-07-21T01:39:12+00:00

Pedro The Fisherman

Roar Rookie


Who cares - there is a year to go before the World Cup and a lot of water to flow under the bridge! A lot of things will change between now and then, including team make-up and pitch conditions.

2018-07-21T00:15:04+00:00

Stuckbetweenindopak

Roar Rookie


Pakstan....i would have said 100% pakistan if sharjeel khan and fakhar zaman were both available in opening slots...imagine opponent bowlers lol. We could have relived hayden-gilly pair not in terms of class but in terms of force and aggression from both ends right from the word go but unfortunately it isnt the case due to banning of sharjeel khan.

2018-07-21T00:03:52+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I predict India will lose an early game in the WC and spend the rest of the tournament complaining. If the conditions are more bowler friendly than they are this year, sides with good attacks should come into it. I wouldn't be surprised to see a NZ/SA final.

2018-07-20T23:14:37+00:00

Saurebh Gandle

Roar Guru


It will be England vs India final for sure. Both are cut above the rest. Australia fortune could change of they name Aaron finch the ODI captain.Sarfaraz has looked good but WC needs men to stand up and take charge.I think pak boy are not up for such lengthy tournament. Come WorldCup all stats become meaningless.

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