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Nightwatchman (cricket)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cricket role
Jason Gillespie holds the record for the highest Test score from a nightwatchman, scoring 201* againstBangladesh at theChittagong Divisional Stadium during the second test ofAustralia's 2005-06 tour of Bangladesh

In the sport ofcricket, anightwatchman is a lower-orderbatter who comes in to bat higher up the order than usual near the end of the day's play.[1] The nightwatchman's job is to maintain most of the strike until the close of play.

The name comes due to the goal of remaining in overnight after the end of the day, a play on words on thewatchmen of public safety and law enforcement. In doing so they protect more capable batters from being out cheaply in what may be a period of tiredness or poor light at the end of the day and again the following morning when the early-morning conditions may favour the bowlers who will be refreshed from their night rest. The theory is that losing two top-order batters in quick succession would be worse than losing one top-order batter and atailender.

Tactical consideration

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The role of nightwatchman is generally given to players who emphasise defensive technique over quick run-scoring, most often a bowler who would normally bat in the 8th or 9th position. There have been occasions when nightwatchmen have made a big score and six have madecenturies intest matches. The nightwatchman's goal tactically is to play conservatively on the night to get through the evening and then play a more even style to score runs and turn over the strike to their batting partner.Daniel Vettori would place himself in the role on several occasions while he was the New Zealand captain. Wicket-keepers may also take on the role,Alan Knott,Wasim Bari,Ben Barnett andIan Healy have scored half-centuries in the role.

Even if the nightwatchman does survive until the end of the day, the beginning of the next day's play will see refreshed bowlers with better light facing a less capable batter. As a result, not all captains use the tactic.Steve Waugh abandoned the tactic during his captaincy of Australia.[2] Furthermore, underBen Stokes England have instead favoured the lower order batsman to play aggressively (thenighthawk).[3] The defensive technique inherent to the role may also lead to their play being too slow for the conditions, the nightwatchman being too good to get out, but not good enough to score at the desired rate of their team.

The nightwatchman is not to be confused with thepinch hitter, a middle to lower order batter who is promoted up the order in limited-overs games, or in first-class games where their team is looking for a quickdeclaration, in the pursuit of quick runs without too much concern for their wicket.

Nightwatchmen failures

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The tactic has potential drawbacks. It is inherently aparadox to send out an inferior batter to attempt to survive the worst conditions a batter can face and their technique can fail them. If the nightwatchman gets out before the end of the day the batting team may need to send out a more capable batter to prevent the loss of further wickets, costing the team a wicket while negating any benefit from using the nightwatchman. In 2014 against India, the Australian side protected wicket-keeperBrad Haddin by sending outNathan Lyon with half an hour to play. Lyon only lasted 4 overs, forcing Haddin to the crease to face a handful of overs and being dismissed on what became the final ball of the day.

In 2024 the Pakistan team in a match against Australia sentSajid Khan as a nightwatchman afterSaud Shakeel was dismissed byJosh Hazlewood with two overs left. This was done to protect genuine all-rounderSalman Ali Agha. The tactic failed miserably as Khan was bowled all ends up on his second ball faced. Salman then had to come out to bat anyway, and he only lasted two more balls before Hazlewood found an easily caught edge, finishing the over with a three wicket maiden.

In 2024 against New Zealand, India protectedVirat Kohli by sending outMohammed Siraj afterYashasvi Jaiswal was dismissed byAjaz Patel with two overs left. Siraj then went outleg before wicket for agolden duck, forcing Kohli to come out to bat. Kohli was thenrun out 7 deliveries later. The choice to send out Siraj was criticised by commentatorsSimon Doull andRavi Shastri, who believedRavichandran Ashwin to be a better choice for nightwatchman.[4][5]

In 2024 against India, Australian opening batsmanNathan McSweeney was dismissed leg before wicket for a duck byJasprit Bumrah in the first over of the final session of the day. With only four overs left until Stumps, Australian captainPat Cummins came out to bat to protectMarnus Labuschagne, but was dismissed byMohammed Siraj in the fourth over, forcing Labuschagne to come out to bat. Labuschagne, like McSweeney, went out leg before wicket to Bumrah 8 deliveries later in the final over of the day, the three dismissed batsmen contributing just five runs between them.

Opener nightwatchmen

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It is very rare but not unknown for a team to use nightwatchmen when an innings begins late in the day. Teams will trust in the ability of the specialist opening batsman to do their usual job of handling the new ball regardless of how difficult that might be. Australian Captain and opening batterMark Taylor has remarked that most batters will accept a nightwatchman when asked, but as an opener he had never been offered one.[6]

Rangana Herath opened the 2nd innings as a nightwatchman in the 1st Test between Sri Lanka and Pakistan in 2009 having batted at 9 in the first innings. Herath took the final 6 balls of the day with usual opening batterMalinda Warnapura at the other end. The next morning Warnapura was out caught on the second ball of the day while Herath scored 15 off 60 balls before an LBW dismissal to Younis Khan.Jack Leach who normally batted 10th or 11th opened as a nightwatchman for England in a 2019 Test match against Ireland, surviving a single over at the evening then top-scoring for the innings with 92 runs the following day with Ireland collapsing in the last innings to be all out 38 chasing 182.

Australia used an opener nightwatchman on the first day of the 4th Test of the2025–26 Ashes series, after both sides were bowled out on a heavily-criticized pitch.[7] Australia was required to bat for a single over to begin their 2nd innings before the close of play. Fast bowlerScott Boland (who had been the #11 batsman in the first innings) replacedJake Weatherald to open alongsideTravis Head. Boland facedGus Atkinson and was dropped at fifth slip off the fifth ball of the over before slicing a thick outside edge for a boundary to huge cheers from the Melbourne crowd to end the day's play.[8]

Reversing the order

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In the days before covered wickets it was common for teams to protect the upper part of the order from asticky wicket by reversing thebatting order and hoping to exchange the inevitable loss of wickets for the time it would take for the wicket to start playing better. Although not necessarily done late in the day, the reversed order effectively turned the promoted part of the order into nightwatchmen for the upper half.Don Bradman once scored 270 not out as the #7 batsman after such a reversal, withBill O'Reilly andChuck Fleetwood-Smith opening the batting and being dismissed for 0 runs each. It was the only time either opened the batting in their Test career.

Test centuries by nightwatchmen

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There have been sixtestcenturies by nightwatchmen (as of 2019[update]), as recognised byESPNcricinfo:[9]

PlayerTeamScoreVersusGroundYear
Nasim-ul-GhaniPakistan101EnglandLord's,London,England1962 Second Test
Tony MannAustralia105IndiaWACA Ground,Perth,Western Australia1977 Second Test
Syed KirmaniIndia101*AustraliaWankhede Stadium,Mumbai,India1979 Sixth Test
Mark BoucherSouth Africa125ZimbabweHarare Sports Club,Harare,Zimbabwe1999 One-off Test
Mark BoucherSouth Africa108EnglandSahara Stadium Kingsmead,Durban,South Africa1999 Third Test
Jason GillespieAustralia201*BangladeshChittagong Divisional Stadium,Chittagong,Bangladesh2006 Second Test

There has been debate about whetherNasim-ul-Ghani (who later opened in a Test) and wicketkeeperBoucher were genuine nightwatchmen – however, in the matches in question they both came in at No. 6, at the end of the day, ahead of more recognised batsmen, andCricinfo considers them to have been nightwatchmen.[9]

Alex Tudor (of England) was close to making a century as a nightwatchman; he made 99not out againstNew Zealand in 1999 atEdgbaston,[1] and was stranded one run short of his maidentestcentury whenGraham Thorpe got the total to the point where a boundary was needed for the win with Tudor being on 95 runs, needing a six to reach his century. Tudor then hit the winning runs with a four, leaving him on 99*, the highest test score he would make in his injury curtailed career.

Also close wasHarold Larwood. In the final Test of the1932–33 Ashes, Larwood made 98 as a nightwatchman, the highest innings made in the role up to that time as well as the highest Test score Larwood would make in his career.

References

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  1. ^ab"What is a night-watchman?".BBC Sport. 25 August 2005. Retrieved27 July 2020.
  2. ^English, Peter (17 October 2004)."A nightwatchman to remember". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved12 April 2012.
  3. ^Ashdown, John (2023-02-17)."Release the Nighthawk! England's novel approach to the nightwatchman".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved2023-07-20.
  4. ^Nayak, Rathnam (1 November 2024)."'Send in a guy who can play!' - Simon Doull unhappy with India's call to send nightwatchman Mohammed Siraj".crictracker.com.
  5. ^"Mohammed Siraj buried under Shastri's sarcasm after India's nightwatchman takes woeful review: 'How did I get it wrong?'".Hindustan Times. 1 November 2024.
  6. ^"Nightwatchmen (2) – Opening and Wicket-keepers". 3 November 2014.
  7. ^"Former players slam 'unfair' MCG pitch as wickets tumble in fourth Ashes test".Reuters.
  8. ^Australia claims first innings lead as ball dominates Boxing Day Test, 2025, retrieved26 December 2025
  9. ^ab"Records – Test Matches – Batting Records – Most runs in an innings by a nightwatchman". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved19 December 2016.

External links

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