Most Productive Overs method
The Most Productive Overs 'method' was a mathematical formulation designed to calculate the target score for the team batting second in a limited overs cricket match interrupted by weather or other circumstances.
It was used from 1991, when it replaced the Average Run Rate method, until 1998.
MPO was used most notably during the 1992 Cricket World Cup, and the controversial effect of its application during the England v South Africa semi-final directly led to the development of the current, Duckworth–Lewis–Stern, method.
History
The Average Run Rate method was replaced in 1991 by the Most Productive Overs method, having been developed by Australia after the third 1989 Australian Tri-Series final between Australia and the West Indies.Chasing Australia's 226/4 off 38 overs, the West Indies initially needed 180 off 31.2 overs when rain stopped play for 85 minutes. Under the average run-rate method, the revised target was 108, meaning the West Indies needed 61 off the 11.2 overs that remained.
After the West Indies won the match by eight wickets with 4.4 overs remaining, Australian fans loudly booed this unsatisfactory conclusion, which was criticised by the media and Australia's captain Allan Border.
Calculation
If an interruption means that the innings of the team batting second is reduced to a total of X overs, their target score is adjusted as follows:Criticisms
Whereas the Average Run Rate method heavily favoured the team batting second, the Most Productive Overs method only favoured the team batting first.There are four intrinsic flaws in the method:
- Firstly, it effectively penalised Team 2 for good bowling, as it ignored their best overs in setting the revised target.
- Secondly, the method took no consideration of wickets lost, but how Team 1 scored their total.
- Thirdly, substantial bookwork was required by the umpires and officials to determine the revised target.
- Fourthly, if the least productive x overs were maiden overs, Team 2 would have been left in the position of matching or beating Team 1's actual total, but with fewer overs to do so.
While these modifications reduced Team 1's advantage, they only addressed the fourth intrinsic flaw of the method.