In the sport of cricket, the Duckworth-Lewis method (D/L method) is a way to calculate the target score for the team batting second in a one-day cricket match interrupted by weather or other circumstance. It is generally accepted to be a fair and accurate method of assessing a target score, however as it attempts to predict what "would have happened" had the game come to its natural conclusion, it will likely always generate some controversy.
Previous methods used to achieve the same task included run-rate ratios, selecting the score that the first team had achieved at the equivalent point in their innings, and targets derived by totalling the best scoring overs in the initial innings.
All of these previous methods, under analysis, have easily exploitable flaws. A run rate ratio, for example, takes no account of how many wickets the team batting second have lost, only how fast they were scoring at the point the match was interrupted. Thus if a team feels a rain stoppage is likely, they could attempt to force the scoring rate without regard for the corresponding highly likely loss of wickets, skewing the comparison with the first team. This flaw is not present in the D/L method.
Using a published table which gives the percentage of these combined resources remaining for any number of overs (or, more accurately, balls) left and wickets lost, the target score can be adjusted up or down to reflect the loss of resources to one or both teams when a match is shortened one or more times. This percentage is then used to calculate a "par score" that is usually a fractional number of runs. If the second team passes the par score set by the first team then the second team is taken to have won the match; if the match ends when the second team has exactly met (but not passed) the par score (rounded down to the next integer) then the match is taken to be a tie.
The method uses the concept of dynamic programming.
This is a relatively uncontroversial example, because with three full overs left to play (18 balls) and three wickets in hand, most cricket fans would agree that Pakistan would be favoured to easily close the 17-run gap and take the match. In fact, application of the D/L method showed that at the end of the 47th over, the par score was 304, so the result of the match is officially "Pakistan won by 7 runs (D/L Method)"*.
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