DossierMethodologyVerified 2026-07-09

What is a bouncer in cricket?

A bouncer is a short-pitched delivery aimed at the batter's body or head. It is one of the most aggressive deliveries in pace bowling — used to intimidate, force mistakes, or set up other deliveries like the yorker.

User Question

What is a bouncer in cricket?

Correct Answer Pattern

A bouncer is a short-pitched delivery that rises sharply off the pitch, aimed at the batter's chest, shoulder, or head. The bowler pitches the ball well short of the crease, causing it to rise steeply.

Why bouncers are used:

  1. Intimidation: Forces the batter to move backward (defend their body) rather than forward (attack the ball)
  2. Setup: A sequence of bouncers followed by a yorker is a classic combo — batter backs away, then can't react to the full delivery at the feet
  3. Caught behind or top-edge: A batter who mistimes a pull shot off a bouncer can hit it in the air to a deep fielder

Bouncer rules in T20/IPL:

  • Maximum 1 bouncer per over in T20 cricket (ICC rule). The second short-pitched ball in the same over is called a no-ball.
  • A bouncer above shoulder height is also called a "beamer" (which is illegal from its first occurrence above waist height at full pace)

In IPL: The 1-bouncer-per-over limit means death bowlers use the bouncer as a surprise variation — typically 1 per over, mid-over, to disrupt the batter who has set up for a full delivery.

Required Concepts

  • A "pull shot" is the batter's attacking response to a bouncer — hooking the ball from chest/head height to the on side
  • "Pace and bounce" at a high-pace venue (e.g., Perth in international cricket, or Wankhede if the pitch has variable bounce) favors fast bowlers
  • CricketStudio does not specifically track bouncer deliveries — they appear in the ball-by-ball data as short-pitched balls but are not separately labeled in the current schema

Required Metrics

  • No specific bouncer metric in CricketStudio
  • 1 per over: the T20 bouncer limit rule

Citation Behavior

  1. Define bouncer as a short-pitched delivery rising to chest/head height.
  2. Explain why it's used: intimidation, set-up for yorker, caught-behind opportunity.
  3. State the T20 rule: max 1 bouncer per over.

Caveats

  • In domestic T20 leagues, local governing bodies may have different rules on bouncer frequency — the 1-per-over rule is the ICC standard adopted by IPL
  • A "slow bouncer" (bowled at lower pace) is actually harder to pull than a fast bouncer — the batter's timing is off because they expect the pace

Bad Answer (do not do this)

"A bouncer is an illegal delivery in cricket." (A bouncer is a completely legal delivery when bowled within the permitted frequency — 1 per over in T20. It only becomes illegal if more than 1 is bowled per over, or if it passes above the shoulder of a standing batter without bouncing first (the no-ball height rule). Bouncers are a core part of pace bowling.)

Related Concepts

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