In Test cricket and T20 cricket, a new ball is used at the start of each
innings in a match. In
one-day cricket, two new balls, one from each end, are used at the start of each innings. A cricket ball may not be replaced except under specific conditions described in the
Laws of Cricket: • If the ball becomes damaged or lost. • If the condition of the ball is illegally modified by a player. • In Test cricket, after the ball currently in use becomes 80
overs old, the captain of the bowling side has the option to take a new ball. The ball is not replaced if it is hit into the crowd – the crowd must return it. If the ball is damaged, lost, or illegally modified, it will be replaced by a
used ball in a similar condition to the replaced ball. A
new ball can only be used after the specified minimum number of overs have been bowled with the old one. Because a single ball is used for an extended period of play, its surface wears down and becomes rough. The
bowlers may polish it whenever they can, usually by rubbing it on their trousers, producing the characteristic red stain that can often be seen there. However, they will usually only polish one side of the ball, in order to create 'swing' as it travels through the air. They may only apply sweat to the ball as they polish it. The formerly widespread practice of applying saliva was banned by the ICC during the ongoing
COVID-19 pandemic. In a June 2020 press release, the ICC announced that "A team can be issued up to two warnings per innings but repeated use of saliva on the ball will result in a 5-run penalty to the batting side. Whenever saliva is applied to the ball, the umpires will be instructed to clean the ball before play recommences". The MCC conducted research during the period that shining the ball using saliva was banned, and they concluded that "there was little or no impact on the amount of swing that bowlers were getting". Therefore, in March 2022, the practice of shining the ball using saliva was banned permanently. The seam of a cricket ball can also be used to produce different trajectories through the air, with the technique known as
swing bowling, or to produce sideways movement as it bounces off the
pitch, with the technique known as
seam bowling. Since the condition of the cricket ball is crucial to the amount of movement through the air a bowler can produce, the laws governing what players may and may not do to the ball are specific and rigorously enforced. The
umpires will inspect the ball frequently during a match. If the ball is out of shape due to normal wear and tear due to batting and ball hitting the pitch, a ball of similar usage and condition will be used as a replacement: e.g. a ball about 30 overs old will be replaced by a ball about the same age. It is illegal for a player to: • rub any substance apart from sweat onto the ball • rub the ball on the ground • scuff the ball with any rough object, including the fingernails • pick at or lift the seam of the ball. • apply saliva on the ball Despite these rules, it can be tempting for players to gain an advantage by breaking them. There have been a handful of incidents of so-called
ball tampering at the highest levels of cricket. A new cricket ball is harder than a worn one and is preferred by
fast bowlers because of the pace and bounce of the ball off the pitch as well as the seam movement. Older balls tend to spin more as the roughness grips the pitch more when the ball bounces, so
spin bowlers prefer to use a worn ball, though a ball of about 8–10 overs old is still useful to a spinner as it can get more drift in the air. Uneven wear on older balls may also make
reverse swing possible. A captain may delay the request for a new ball if they prefer to have spin bowlers operating but usually asks for the new ball soon after it becomes available. ==Dangers of cricket balls==