Cricket is unlike any other sport when it comes to betting variety, simply because it doesn't have one format, it has three. A Test match can stretch across five full days and still end in a draw. A One Day International wraps up in roughly eight hours. A T20 is over in about three. Each format changes which markets matter and how you should think about them.
This guide covers how cricket betting works across all three formats, the full range of markets available on Duelbits, and the research that separates informed cricket bettors from those just picking the bigger team name.
The longest and most traditional format, up to five days, with each team batting twice (two innings) and no limit on the number of overs bowled in an innings.
Critical betting implication: A draw is a genuine, common outcome in Test cricket. If the match isn't completed (due to weather, or simply because neither team can force a result in the time available), it ends in a draw. This means Test match winner markets are typically three-way: Team A, Draw, Team B.
Each team bats for a maximum of 50 overs. Matches are completed in a single day, typically 7-8 hours including breaks.
Critical betting implication: Results are far more common than in Tests, since both teams face a fixed number of overs and the match cannot simply run out of time the way a Test can. Draws are rare; a "no result" (usually due to rain) is the more common non-decisive outcome.
Each team bats for a maximum of 20 overs. The shortest format, typically completed in around three hours.
Critical betting implication: The fastest-paced format with the most volatility per ball. A single over can completely swing a T20 match in a way that's far less likely across a 50-over ODI or a five-day Test. Live betting is most dynamic in T20 cricket precisely because of this compressed run-scoring window.
The simplest cricket bet, pick which team wins.
| Team A | Team B |
|---|---|
| 1.65 | 2.35 |
| Team A | Draw | Team B |
|---|---|---|
| 2.50 | 3.40 | 2.80 |
Always check whether you're looking at a two-way or three-way market before betting, backing a Test team to win at a two-way price that doesn't account for the draw possibility is a common beginner mistake.
Bet on which individual player scores the most runs (top batsman) or takes the most wickets (top bowler) in a match or innings.
These are among the most popular individual player markets in cricket, particularly in T20 formats where a single explosive innings or a standout bowling spell can define the entire match. Markets are typically offered per team (top batsman for Team A specifically) and across the whole match (top batsman overall).
Research factors: Recent form, the specific bowling attack or batting lineup they're facing, batting position (openers and middle-order batsmen have very different run-scoring profiles), and pitch conditions (spin-friendly vs pace-friendly tracks favour different bowler types).
A bet on the total number of runs scored, typically for a single innings.
Example (T20 innings total):
| Over 165.5 | Under 165.5 |
|---|---|
| 1.90 | 1.90 |
What drives totals: Pitch conditions are the single biggest factor, flat, dry pitches favour batsmen and push totals up; pitches with grass cover or that take spin tend to suppress scoring. Ground dimensions also matter significantly; some grounds are notoriously small and produce inflated totals, while others are large with totals that run consistently lower.
A market specific to longer formats. A day's play in a Test match is typically broken into three sessions (morning, afternoon, evening), and session betting lets you wager on outcomes within just one of those sessions, for example, total runs scored in the first session, or which team scores more in a specific session.
This market rewards bettors who track pitch behaviour and weather changes throughout a single day rather than trying to predict the entire match outcome at once.
Bet on how a specific batsman gets out, caught, bowled, LBW (leg before wicket), stumped, or run out. These props require knowledge of both the batsman's typical dismissal patterns and the bowling attack's specific threats (a team with a strong spin attack increases the relative likelihood of LBW or stumped dismissals, for example).
For multi-match series or tournaments (the ICC World Cup, T20 World Cup, IPL, or a bilateral Test series), outright markets let you bet on which team wins the overall series or tournament, settled at the conclusion of the full competition rather than a single match.
Cricket live betting updates continuously, ball by ball. Markets re-price after every delivery based on the current run rate, required run rate (in run-chases), wickets remaining, and overs left.
Where live betting is most dynamic: T20 cricket, where a single over (6 balls) can swing 20+ runs and completely change the win probability. The "death overs" (the final few overs of a T20 or ODI innings) are typically the highest-variance period of any cricket match, as batsmen take maximum risks to maximise the score.
The coin toss, deciding which team bats or bowls first, is one of cricket's most discussed pre-match factors, and for good reason.
Different pitches around the world favour different styles dramatically. Some grounds are renowned for flat, run-friendly batting tracks; others are known for assisting spin or seam bowling significantly. Pre-match pitch reports (often given by ground curators or broadcast commentators) are one of the most valuable pieces of information available to cricket bettors.
Cricket teams and players can have dramatic form swings, especially across different formats. A team that's dominant in Test cricket might be mediocre in T20. Always check format-specific recent form rather than a player or team's overall reputation.
Cricket teams announce their final playing XI (11 players) shortly before the match. Injuries, rest rotations (common in busy tournament schedules), and tactical team selection changes can all significantly affect match probability. Always check confirmed lineups before finalising bets.
Some teams have strong historical records at specific venues or against specific opponents, independent of overall current form. Checking head-to-head history at the specific ground hosting the match adds useful context beyond general team strength.
Rain affects cricket more than almost any other sport, particularly in ODI and Test formats where reduced overs (via rules like the DLS, Duckworth-Lewis-Stern method) can change the entire run-target calculation. Always check the weather forecast for multi-day or rain-prone fixtures.
Test cricket rewards patience and session-based analysis. T20 rewards reading momentum and live betting. Don't apply T20 logic (chasing fast in-play swings) to Test betting, or Test-style patient analysis to a three-hour T20 where conditions can shift completely within a handful of overs.
Star players often carry short odds in the top batsman or top bowler markets regardless of matchup specifics. Look for situations where a slightly less famous player has a particularly favourable matchup, facing a weaker bowling attack on a pitch that suits their style, for better value than the obvious headline name.
Predicting an entire Test match result requires getting five days right. Session betting lets you take a view on a single, more analysable chunk of play, useful when you have a strong opinion about specific conditions (an overcast morning session that should favour swing bowling, for example) without needing a five-day forecast.
Once the toss result and batting/bowling decision are known, in-play markets adjust accordingly. Getting your bet in immediately after the toss, before the market fully reflects conditions, can occasionally offer better value than waiting.
Ground dimensions vary enormously in cricket, some boundaries are notably short, inflating totals; others are large, suppressing them. Always check a specific ground's historical scoring data before betting total runs markets, rather than assuming a "standard" total applies everywhere.
| Feature | Cricket | Football (Soccer) | Tennis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Match length | 3 hrs (T20) to 5 days (Test) | ~2 hours | 2-5 hours |
| Draw possibility | Yes (Test only) | Yes | No |
| In-play volatility | Very high (T20 death overs) | Moderate | High |
| Individual player markets | Deep (batsman/bowler) | Moderate (goalscorer) | N/A (1v1 sport) |
| Weather impact | Significant | Moderate | Moderate (outdoor) |
Duelbits Sportsbook carries cricket betting coverage across international fixtures, domestic T20 leagues, and major ICC tournaments. Navigate to Cricket from the Sportsbook menu to find match winner, top batsman, top bowler, total runs, session betting, and live in-play markets on every major series.
How do you bet on cricket? Choose a match, identify the format (Test, ODI, T20), and select a market, match winner, top batsman, total runs, or session betting are the most common. Add to your bet slip, enter your stake, and confirm.
What's the difference between Test, ODI and T20 betting? Test cricket (up to 5 days, unlimited overs per innings) frequently ends in a draw, making three-way markets standard. ODI (50 overs) almost always produces a result. T20 (20 overs) is the fastest format, typically completed in around three hours, with draws extremely rare.
What is session betting? A market for Test and ODI cricket letting you bet on outcomes within a specific session of play, rather than the whole match, for example, total runs in the first session of a Test day.
What does over/under mean in cricket? Usually applied to total runs in an innings. The book sets a line (e.g., 165.5) and you bet over or under. Can also apply to individual player run or wicket totals.
What is a top batsman or top bowler bet? A wager on which player scores the most runs (batsman) or takes the most wickets (bowler) in a match, popular in all formats, especially T20.
Why does the toss matter? Determines who bats/bowls first. Affects pitch deterioration advantages (Test) and dew factor in evening matches (T20/ODI), a key pre-match and in-play data point.
Where can I bet on cricket? At Duelbits Sportsbook under Cricket, international fixtures, domestic T20 leagues, and major ICC tournaments with full market coverage.