For decades, the final 10 overs of an ODI innings were a batsman’s playground—fresh white balls zipping off the bat, dew-assisted swings, and clean sixes raining down. But that era may be over. A subtle yet seismic shift by the International Cricket Council (ICC)—mandating only **one ball per innings** after the 34th over—has turned the death overs into a tactical minefield. Suddenly, batsmen aren’t just fighting bowlers; they’re battling a soft, scuffed, and unpredictable old ball that refuses to fly. And as Indian batting coach Sitanshu Kotak bluntly put it: “We need a completely new approach” .
This isn’t just about wear and tear—it’s about physics, psychology, and re-engineering decades of ingrained muscle memory. With major tournaments like the 2027 ODI World Cup on the horizon, teams from India to New Zealand are scrambling to decode how to score fast when the ball won’t cooperate. The result? A quiet revolution in death-overs batting strategy that could redefine modern limited-overs cricket.
Table of Contents
- What Is the ICC’s One-Ball Rule?
- Why Death-Overs Batting Just Got Harder
- How India Is Adapting Under Sitanshu Kotak
- Global Teams Rethink Their Endgame
- New Tactics for an Old-Ball World
- Impact on Player Selection and Training
- Conclusion
- Sources
What Is the ICC’s One-Ball Rule?
In a move aimed at reducing costs and promoting sustainability, the ICC announced in late 2025 that all men’s ODIs would use only **one ball per innings**, replacing the long-standing practice of introducing a fresh ball from each end at the 35-over mark. While women’s ODIs already followed this model, its extension to men’s cricket has sent shockwaves through batting camps .
The rule means that by the time the 40th over arrives, the ball is over 200 deliveries old—significantly softer, less responsive off the pitch, and far less likely to travel when hit in the air.
Why Death-Overs Batting Just Got Harder
A fresh white Kookaburra or SG ball retains its hardness and seam integrity, allowing it to come onto the bat cleanly and carry over the ropes. An old ball, however, behaves very differently:
- Reduced Pace Off Bat: Softer leather absorbs impact, lowering exit velocity.
- Unpredictable Swing: Scuffing causes erratic movement, making timing difficult.
- Poor Boundary Conversion: Data shows boundary rates drop by up to 30% with balls older than 180 deliveries .
As Kotak explained, “You can’t just rely on brute power anymore. You have to manufacture innovation—ramps, scoops, clever placement.”
How India Is Adapting Under Sitanshu Kotak
The Indian team, known for its explosive finishers like Hardik Pandya and Suryakumar Yadav, is undergoing a strategic overhaul. During recent training camps, the focus has shifted from pure power-hitting to “smart aggression”:
- Targeted Shot Selection: Prioritizing gaps over straight sixes.
- Enhanced Bottom-Hand Control: Drills to manipulate old-ball trajectory using wrists.
- Simulated Conditions: Practice sessions using 200+ delivery-old balls under stadium lights.
Kotak emphasized that players must now “read the ball’s condition like a bowler reads a pitch”—a mindset shift from entertainer to technician .
Global Teams Rethink Their Endgame
India isn’t alone. New Zealand, England, and Australia have all adjusted their death-over playbooks:
- New Zealand: Promoting Glenn Phillips higher to exploit his 360-degree strokeplay with older balls.
- England: Reintroducing “anchor-finisher” pairs where one player rotates strike while the other targets specific bowlers.
- Australia: Investing in AI-driven ball-wear simulators to train batters in realistic conditions.
Even data analysts are getting involved—tracking how ball age affects shot success rates across venues and humidity levels.
New Tactics for an Old-Ball World
Coaches are now teaching a new set of “death-over principles” for aged balls:
- Avoid Straight Sixes: The ball dies quickly down the ground; target square or behind point.
- Use the Depth of the Crease: Back-foot play generates more control than front-foot lofted shots.
- Exploit Slower Balls: Older balls don’t grip for yorkers—scoops and paddles become high-percentage options.
For a deeper look at evolving ODI strategies, see our analysis on [INTERNAL_LINK:evolution-of-odi-batting-tactics].
Impact on Player Selection and Training
This shift could favor versatile stroke-makers over pure power-hitters. Players like Shreyas Iyer or David Miller—who excel at placement and improvisation—may gain more value than raw sluggers.
National academies are also updating equipment protocols. According to ESPNcricinfo, the BCCI has mandated that all domestic List A matches now use the one-ball rule to acclimatize emerging talent . Meanwhile, manufacturers like Kookaburra are reportedly developing “long-life” coatings to maintain ball hardness—but such innovations remain unapproved by the ICC.
Conclusion
The ICC’s well-intentioned sustainability measure has inadvertently triggered a strategic earthquake in ODI cricket. The golden age of mindless slogging in the death overs is giving way to a more cerebral, adaptive form of death-overs batting. Teams that master the art of scoring against an old, tired ball will hold a decisive edge in future tournaments. As Sitanshu Kotak wisely noted, “Cricket isn’t just about strength—it’s about solving problems with a bat in hand.” And right now, the biggest problem is a ball that simply won’t fly.
Sources
[1] Times of India. (2026, January). One ball, endgame: Why teams are rethinking death-overs batting after ICC ball tweak. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/cricket/india-vs-new-zealand/one-ball-endgame-why-teams-are-rethinking-death-overs-batting-after-icc-ball-tweak/articleshow/126519140.cms
[2] CricViz Analytics. (2025). Impact of Ball Age on Boundary Rates in ODIs.
[3] ESPNcricinfo. (2026, January). BCCI Implements One-Ball Rule in Domestic Cricket.
[4] International Cricket Council (ICC). (2025). Playing Conditions for Men’s ODIs – 2026 Edition. https://www.icc-cricket.com