Cricket Glossary
Glossary explained in plain English for parents learning Cricket.
| Term | Plain-English Meaning | Example | Also Known As |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cricket | A bat-and-ball sport where one side bats to score runs while the other bowls and fields to limit runs and take wickets. | The team plays a shortened youth cricket match on Saturday. | |
| Batter | A player from the batting side who faces deliveries and tries to score runs. | The batter taps the ball into a gap and calls yes. | Batsman;striker |
| Bowler | The player who delivers the ball toward the batter and wicket. | The bowler aims for a good line and length. | |
| Wicketkeeper | The specialist fielder behind the wicket who catches missed balls, gathers throws, and helps with stumpings and run outs. | The wicketkeeper collects the ball cleanly and removes the bails. | Keeper |
| Fielder | Any player on the fielding side who is not currently bowling or keeping wicket. | A fielder backs up the throw near the stumps. | |
| Wicket | The stumps and bails at each end, or a dismissal depending on context. | The team took a wicket when the batter was bowled. | Stumps;dismissal |
| Stumps | The three vertical posts that make up the wicket. | The ball hits the stumps and the batter is bowled. | |
| Bails | The small pieces resting on top of the stumps. | The bails fall after the throw hits the wicket. | |
| Over | A set of legal deliveries by one bowler, commonly six in many formats. | The coach says there are two overs left. | |
| Delivery | One ball bowled to the batter. | The delivery bounces just outside off stump. | Ball |
| Innings | A team's turn to bat. | The second innings starts after the break. | |
| Run | The basic scoring unit in cricket. | The batters complete one run safely. | Single |
| Boundary | The edge of the playing area and the scoring result when the ball reaches or clears it. | The ball reaches the boundary for four. | Rope |
| Four | A boundary score when the ball reaches the boundary after touching the ground. | The umpire signals four after the ball rolls to the rope. | |
| Six | A boundary score when the ball clears the boundary on the full. | The batter hits a six over the cones marking the boundary. | |
| Extra | A run added to the team score that is not a normal run credited to the batter. | The score increases after a wide. | Sundry |
| Wide | A delivery too far from the batter to reasonably hit under the local rule. | The umpire calls wide and adds an extra. | |
| No Ball | An illegal delivery for reasons such as foot placement, height, action, or local safety rules. | The umpire signals no ball after the bowler oversteps. | |
| Bye | An extra run when the batter does not hit the ball and it does not hit the body, but the batters run. | The ball passes the wicketkeeper and the batters run a bye. | |
| Leg Bye | An extra run after the ball touches the batter's body rather than the bat, if the local rule allows it. | The ball glances off the pad and the batters run a leg bye. | |
| Dismissal | A way a batter gets out. | Caught, bowled, and run out are common dismissals. | Out |
| Bowled | A dismissal when a legal delivery hits the wicket and puts it down. | The ball hits the stumps and the batter is bowled. | |
| Caught | A dismissal when a fielder catches the ball from the bat before it touches the ground. | The slip fielder catches the edge. | |
| Run Out | A dismissal when the fielding side breaks the wicket while a batter is short of the crease during a run. | The throw beats the batter to the wicket for a run out. | |
| Stumped | A dismissal when the wicketkeeper puts down the wicket while the batter is out of the crease after missing or not playing the ball. | The wicketkeeper completes a stumping after the batter steps forward. | |
| LBW | Leg before wicket, a dismissal in some formats when the ball would have hit the wicket but is stopped illegally by the batter's leg or body. | Older hard-ball formats may use LBW more than beginner formats. | Leg before wicket |
| Crease | Marked lines near each wicket that help judge runs, bowling legality, and some dismissals. | The batter grounds the bat behind the crease. | |
| Line And Length | Bowling terms for side-to-side direction and where the ball pitches. | The coach asks for a better line and length. | |
| Slip | A close catching fielder near the wicketkeeper, often used for edges from the bat. | The slip moves ready for a catch. | |
| Pairs Cricket | A youth format where batters work in pairs for set overs, often so everyone gets a turn. | Each pair bats for two overs before rotating. | |
| Soft-Ball Cricket | A beginner or youth format using a softer ball and often simpler equipment or rules. | The clinic starts with soft-ball cricket before hard-ball cricket. |