The
opening batters or
openers are the batters who bat first in the
innings (no. 1 and 2). This position is very important as the openers need to get the innings off to a good start. The early fall of
wickets can have a serious psychological impact on the rest of the team, affecting their performance with the bat. The opening batters also get the first experience of the
pitch and conditions and must be able to adjust to them quickly. Due to this, they are able to inform other batters of the state of the pitch as well. Most importantly, the opening batters must face a new
ball, which is hard and has a pronounced seam. This makes it more liable to travel fast, bounce high,
seam around (i.e., bounce unpredictably off the seam) and
swing (i.e., deviate sideways when travelling through the air). These early conditions favour the bowling team, so the opening batters must have considerable patience, a sound technique and be good defensively. As the ball gets older, its condition starts to favour the batting team. Therefore, the openers will ideally stay at the
crease long enough to protect the batters further down the order. In
first-class cricket, the rate at which the openers score runs is not as important as "taking the shine off" the new ball. This is the process of softening and roughening the
cricket ball, whose condition tends to degrade the longer it is in play. By occupying the crease for a long time and taking the shine off the ball, the openers themselves are able to score more freely later on. This also makes batting easier for the rest of the order. Because of the defensive technique required early on, openers are sometimes less fluent stroke-players than the specialist batters who follow. In
limited overs cricket, the role of opening batter is slightly different. In this type of cricket a high
run rate is a necessity. Also, in the early 1990s,
fielding restrictions were introduced in the early overs of the game, limiting the fielding side to only two players on the
boundary. To start the innings effectively and take advantage of the fielding restrictions, it became beneficial to have an aggressive batter opening the innings. Due to these differences, there are examples of batsmen who would ordinarily play down in the lower order, such as a wicket-keeper batsman in First Class and Test Match cricket or heavy hitting all-rounders, being elevated to open in limited overs cricket.
Adam Gilchrist batted in a 6, 7 or 8 position batter for all but a handful of his Test innings but in One Day Internationals he opened over 260 times. If an opening batter remains
not out at the end of the team's innings, after all 10 other batters have been dismissed, he or she is said to have
carried the bat. ==Top order==