When a cricket question contains specific numerical scoring data — runs scored, wickets taken, overs bowled, balls faced, margin of victory, or detailed batting/bowling figures.
Cricket questions are rich in numerical data that maps directly to scorecard databases (ESPN Cricinfo, etc.). Numbers are the most powerful pinpointing tool in cricket search because exact scores are unique identifiers.
Combine scoring numbers with match type and year to construct scorecard-style queries. For example, "168/9 IPL 2009" will match far fewer results than "IPL 2009 match."
Key number types to exploit:
When numbers alone are not enough, add the match type (ODI/T20/Test/IPL) and any team name clues.
"[team name] [total]/[wickets] [match type] [year] batting scorecard"
"cricket match last seven overs [runs] runs [wickets] wickets"
"[team A] v [team B] [year] [score] [tournament]"
Pragyan Ojha: Question described 41-43 runs and 7 wickets in last seven overs. Searched "cricket match last seven overs 41 42 43 runs 7 wickets" → direct hit on the IPL 2009 match → found Player of the Match.
Mohammad Yousuf: Player scored 20 runs off 19 balls on debut. Searched "cricketer born Lahore debut 2000 2010 T20 20 runs 19 balls" → found the player directly from debut stats.
Broad searches without numbers: "ODI match before 2006 won by 100 runs" is too vague. Always include the specific scoring numbers from the question.