Exploring the Role of Network Centrality in Player Selection: A Case Study of Pakistan Super League
Abeer Khan, Maria Hunaid Samiwala, Abeeha Zawar, Muhammad Qasim Pasta,, Shah Jamal Alam

TL;DR
This study uses social network analysis of PSL cricket data to evaluate player performance and team selection, revealing insights into nepotism and potential overlooked players for international tournaments.
Contribution
It introduces a network-based ranking method using centrality measures to assess player belongingness and compare with official team selections in cricket.
Findings
11 of 18 World Cup players were in the network-based teams.
Most non-selected players ranked highly, indicating potential overlooked talent.
Network analysis highlights possible biases in team selection processes.
Abstract
Cricket, a popular bat-and-ball game in South Asia, is played between two 11-player teams. The Pakistan Super League (PSL) is a commercial T20 domestic league comprised of six franchise-owned teams, where player selection is competitive. In this study, an existing role-based ranking structure is assessed that evaluates player performance in the context of team belongingness to generate optimal Pakistan cricket teams for international tournaments. The underlying assumption is that since cricket is fundamentally a team sport, the performance of players compared to their peers plays a crucial role in their selection. To accomplish this, a network is generated using ball-by-ball data from previous PSL matches (2016-2022), and social network analysis (SNA) techniques such as centrality and clustering coefficient measures, are employed to quantify the level of belongingness among Pakistani…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSports Analytics and Performance · Sports, Gender, and Society
