In the sport of cricket, a run is the basic unit of scoring. Runs are scored by a batsman, and the aggregate of the scores of a team's batsmen (plus any extras) constitutes the team's score. A batsman scoring 50 (a 'half century') or 100 runs (a 'century'), or any higher multiple of 50 runs, is considered a particular achievement. By extension, a partnership of two batsmen moving the team score on by a multiple of 50 runs, or the team score passing a multiple of 50 runs, is also cause for celebration.
Thus, according to Law 18, a run is scored when:
Runs are added to the team score, but not the score of an individual batsman, for extras (no balls, wides, byes and leg byes).
If either umpire considers that either or both batsmen deliberately run short, the umpire can give a warning to the batsman that this is unfair and disallow any earned runs from that delivery. If an umpire considers that any batsmen deliberately runs short again in that innings, a 5 run penalty is conceded to the bowling side. In practice, this rule is rarely invoked.
Cricket terminology | Batting (cricket) | Cricket records and statistics | Cricket scoring
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"Run (cricket)".
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