A night watchman in cricket is a lower-order batter, usually a bowler, sent in near the end of a day’s play in multi‑day matches to protect the more skilled top‑order batters from having to face the last few overs.

Simple definition

  • A night watchman is typically a bowler or tail‑ender promoted up the order when a wicket falls late in the day.
  • The main job is survival : stay not out until stumps rather than score runs, so the specialist batter can start fresh the next morning.

Why teams use a night watchman

  • Late in the day, light, pitch and bowlers’ rhythm can make batting tricky, so teams avoid exposing a key batter for just a few overs.
  • If the night watchman survives, the proper batter returns next day in better conditions, mentally and physically reset.

How a night watchman bats

  • They are instructed to play very defensive, leave a lot of balls, and absorb as many deliveries as possible without getting out.
  • Scoring quickly is not expected; occupying the crease and “seeing off” the day is considered success.

Fun twist and famous examples

  • Sometimes a night watchman goes beyond the brief and scores big, turning a defensive move into a huge bonus.
  • One famous case is Jason Gillespie, a bowler who scored a double century for Australia against Bangladesh after coming in as a night watchman.

Meta info

  • This tactic is mainly used in Test and first‑class cricket, where matches are played over multiple days and there is a close of play each day.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.