Understanding the Inputs (इनपुट को समझें)
Runs per over (प्रति ओवर रन):
Enter the runs conceded by the bowler in each over, in order. Example: 4, 6, 3, 8, 12, 5 means over 1 gave 4 runs, over 2 gave 6 runs, over 3 gave 3 runs, and so on. Use comma or space to separate values. Include all runs (boundaries, singles, wides, no-balls) for each over.
Cumulative economy (संचयी इकोनॉमी):
After each over, the cumulative economy is the total runs conceded so far divided by the number of overs bowled. For example, after 3 overs with 4, 6, 3 runs: cumulative economy = (4+6+3) ÷ 3 = 4.33. This shows how economy changes as the spell progresses.
Expensive overs (महंगे ओवर):
Overs in which 10 or more runs were conceded are flagged as expensive. In T20 and ODI, such overs can swing momentum. Tracking them helps identify which overs hurt the bowler's overall economy and where to improve.
Formula Used (उपयोग किया गया सूत्र)
Economy = Total runs conceded ÷ Number of overs
इकोनॉमी = दिए गए कुल रन ÷ ओवरों की संख्या
Per-over economy = Runs in that over ÷ 1 (same as runs for one over)
Example: 4, 6, 3, 8, 12, 5 runs per over → Total = 38 runs, 6 overs → Overall economy = 38 ÷ 6 = 6.33. Over 5 (12 runs) is expensive.
Why Over Economy Tracker Matters (महत्व)
A single overall economy rate hides variation. One expensive over (e.g. 15 runs) can ruin an otherwise tight spell. This tracker shows over-by-over performance, cumulative economy, and which overs were costly. Captains and coaches use it to plan bowling changes and identify phases (powerplay, middle, death) where a bowler struggles or excels.
Do's and Don'ts (क्या करें और क्या न करें)
Do's:
- Enter runs in the correct order (over 1 first, over 2 second, etc.).
- Count all runs conceded per over, including wides and no-balls.
- Use comma or space to separate—both work.
- Track spells across formats (T20 powerplay vs death) to spot patterns.
Don'ts:
- Don't mix overs from different spells or matches without noting the context.
- Don't confuse per-over economy (runs in one over) with overall economy (total runs ÷ total overs).
- Don't forget that one expensive over can skew the overall figure.