News | International
29 Jun 2024 14:51
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > International

    Frank Duckworth, co-founder of cricket's Duckworth-Lewis method, dies aged 84

    Just hours after his method almost played a crucial role in the T20 World Cup, statistics giant Frank Duckworth dies aged 84.


    Frank Duckworth, the man whose mathematical knowledge helped to revolutionise rain-affected cricket, died overnight aged 84.

    The English statistician created the Duckworth-Lewis method with Tony Lewis, a model to recalculate scores when limited-over matches were curtailed by weather conditions.

    Announcing Duckworth's death, fellow statistician Rob Eastaway said he had been "a very genial man" who was "proud" of the method, despite it leaving casual fans somewhat flummoxed.

    "A lot of people either claim they don't understand it or don't like it, but they know deep down, it is the best way of working," he said.

    Duckworth spent his entire career working in the nuclear industry.

    Originally employed as a metallurgist, he found he had an ability to extract useful information from masses of numerical measurements.

    A course in statistics followed and he later became a statistician, being elected as a fellow of the Royal Statistical Society in 1974.

    At the society's conference in 1992, he presented a short paper which proposed a formula for target correction in rain interrupted one-day cricket matches.

    This led him to meet Lewis, a mathematics lecturer, who suggested an analysis of one-day score sheets based on Duckworth's proposed formula.

    Their method was devised in the wake of a farcical World Cup semi-final between England and South Africa in 1992.

    Rain stopped play with South Africa needing 22 runs from 13 balls, but on resumption, the then-method of recalculation, which was based on productive overs, saw them requiring an almost impossible 22 runs off one delivery.

    Speaking in 2007, Duckworth, who lived in Gloucestershire, said he recalled hearing BBC Test Match Special commentator Christopher Martin-Jenkins "on the radio, saying 'surely someone, somewhere, could come up with something better'".

    "I realised that it was a mathematical problem that required a mathematical solution," he said.

    The subsequent Duckworth-Lewis method was first used in the ICC Trophy in Malaysia in 1997 and in 1998, it was applied in New Zealand, South Africa, Pakistan, India and West Indies.

    The International Cricket Council adopted the method for the 1999 World Cup in England and it was adopted on a trial basis for all cricket by the ICC in 2001 before becoming the permanent solution three years later.

    It is now known as the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern method after Australian statistician Prof Steven Stern became the custodian of the method following his predecessors' retirement.

    Stern updated the method in 2014 to take into account modern scoring trends and T20 cricket.

    The method was used as recently as Tuesday in the rain-affected World Cup match between Afghanistan and Bangladesh.

    Duckworth received an honorary doctorate from the University of Bath in 2015.

    In the citation, it said he had been as important to the nuclear industry as he had been to cricket.

    "He came to realise the importance of statistics, not just to ensure reactor safety but also to assure the public that the reactors are safe," it said.

    "At that time, there were no statisticians working at the laboratories, so he set about making himself into a statistician.

    "Then he had to convince his colleagues and others of the power of statistics, and spreading that idea has been at the core of everything he has done since.

    "Persuading the cricket administrators that statistics could help them was just another example of that."

    Eastaway said while the statistician had been a powerhouse when it came to numbers, he also had a lighter side.

    "When Tony Lewis died in 2020, he phoned to tell me that people thought he was already dead," he said.

    "They were like a comedy double act.

    "Lewis was the straight man and Frank was very jovial."

    BBC/ABC

     


    ABC




    © 2024 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

     Other International News
     29 Jun: Search for missing British teenager Jay Slater stretches into second week in Tenerife as family faces global online attention
     29 Jun: Rifleman, NZ's smallest bird may be 'missing link' in birdsong evolution: study
     29 Jun: Reform UK's Nigel Farage wants to shake up the UK election — it's looking like he'll win the seat of Clacton to do it
     29 Jun: Who is Princess Anne? What's her role in the royal family and what's her Olympic past?
     29 Jun: An alleged murder involving two 'dear friends' and renowned writers has left Samoa 'reeling' in shock
     29 Jun: The Tour de France's first doping scandal, 100 years on
     29 Jun: Israel's bombs flatten parts of South Lebanon village amid fears of wider war
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    All Blacks coach Scott Robertson sought the counsel of Wayne Smith before making his first selections official More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Increased freighting costs may see consumers paying higher prices at the checkout More...



     Today's News

    International:
    Search for missing British teenager Jay Slater stretches into second week in Tenerife as family faces global online attention 14:17

    International:
    Rifleman, NZ's smallest bird may be 'missing link' in birdsong evolution: study 14:17

    Netball:
    The Magic are aware of the target on their back with four games remaining in the ANZ Premiership netball regular season 14:07

    Rugby:
    All Blacks coach Scott Robertson sought the counsel of Wayne Smith before making his first selections official 13:47

    Law and Order:
    Nelson's former mayor has been left badly shaken by a frightening incident in her home 13:27

    Politics:
    Reform UK's Nigel Farage wants to shake up the UK election — it's looking like he'll win the seat of Clacton to do it 13:07

    Soccer:
    Colombia have cruised to a 3-nil win over Costa Rica in Group D and booked their spot in the Copa America football quarterfinals 13:07

    Law and Order:
    Police have stopped boy racers in their tracks, at gatherings across the Wellington region 12:27

    Law and Order:
    Police are reminding people not to drink and drive after a woman was found more than five times over the legal breath alcohol limit 12:17

    Golf:
    Two New Zealanders will feature in the final two rounds of golf's US Senior Open 11:57


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd