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Title: Cricket's Smartest Fans Are No Longer Guessing - They Are Computing

India, 16th Apr 2026 - There is a moment every cricket fan knows well. The fourth over of a powerplay. A new batter walking in. Two fielders inside the circle, seven outside. The commentator offers an opinion. The analyst in the studio offers another. Both are educated. Both are experienced. And both, more often than not, are working from the same tool that cricket fans have relied on for decades: instinct shaped by memory.That tool is changing.Across India, a quiet but significant shift is underway in how cricket is consumed, analysed, and understood. It is not happening in the commentary box or on the coaching staff's laptops. It is happening on the phones of ordinary fans, students in Pune building fantasy teams at midnight, office workers in Chennai checking pitch reports during lunch breaks, retired engineers in Kolkata cross-referencing player form data before the toss. The fan, for the first time, is catching up with the expert.Artificial intelligence is the reason why.The Data Has Always Been ThereCricket has always been, at its core, a game of extraordinary statistical richness. No sport on earth generates more granular data per moment of play. Every delivery produces a cascade of measurable events: pace, swing, deviation, line, length, bat speed, shot selection, fielding position, running between wickets. Multiply that across fifteen overs, two innings, eleven players per side, and an entire season of the Indian Premier League, and the volume of available intelligence becomes genuinely staggering.For most of cricket's history, that data lived in scorebooks, then in spreadsheets, then in databases that only franchise analysts and national selectors could meaningfully access. The average fan received a fraction of it filtered through commentary, shaped by narrat...


This press release is issued by King Newswire

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