FantasyCricketScore · editorial reference

Prediction methodology

How the desk frames a cricket prediction. Every call on this desk logs the evidence behind it, the conditions that would invalidate it, and a lower-risk alternative. Confidence is graded, not hidden behind a percentage.

Five-stage process

From evidence to call.

  1. Frame the matchup.Identify the conditions: venue, surface, format, time of day, dew forecast, broadcast context.
  2. Establish role security.For each candidate player: batting position, expected overs, recent usage, opposition matchup.
  3. Log the evidence.Form table, venue splits, recent role changes, workload caps. Each claim is sourced.
  4. Identify the invalidator.What condition would make this call wrong? The desk logs the invalidator alongside the call.
  5. Lower-risk alternative.Every call has a lower-risk alternative. The desk logs it alongside the headline call.
Confidence grading

How strong is the evidence?

GradeWhat it means
HighMultiple converging evidence lines, no obvious invalidator
Medium-highStrong primary evidence, one weak invalidator
MediumTwo evidence lines, one meaningful invalidator
Medium-lowOne evidence line, one obvious invalidator
LowSingle evidence line, multiple invalidators
Post-match review

How the desk learns.

After every prediction, the desk grades the call: hit, miss, or partial. The monthly performance review aggregates these grades. We do not cherry-pick successes or bury misses.

What the methodology is not

Limits of the desk.

Not tipster

No paid picks

The desk does not sell picks. There is no VIP team, no subscription fee, no paid WhatsApp group.

Not betting

Not a betting product

Predictions are editorial analysis. They are not betting tips or guaranteed outcomes.

Not investment

Not investment advice

Past performance does not predict future results. Treat predictions as editorial content, not as financial advice.

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