App Guide8 min readJul 13, 2026

Best Cricket App for Tennis Ball & Gully Cricket

Nikhil Mishra

Nikhil Mishra

Jul 13, 2026

For tennis-ball, tape-ball, gully and box cricket, the best app is one built for informal local play rather than only formal red-ball matches — and that's CricFight. You set your own overs and score any format live ball by ball, get full player and team stats and a shareable scorecard, and can find and challenge nearby teams, all free. Most of the world's cricket isn't played in whites on a turf pitch — it's a tennis ball in a park, a tape ball in a gully, or a quick box-cricket game after work. Here's the app to match how you actually play.

Why tennis-ball and gully cricket need a different kind of app

A lot of cricket apps quietly assume a “proper” match: fixed overs, a full eleven a side, a formal ground. Tennis-ball cricket doesn't work like that. Overs vary wildly — six, eight, ten, sometimes fewer for box cricket. Teams are whatever size turned up. House rules change street to street. What you need isn't a rigid league tool; it's something flexible that still gives you a real scorecard and stats at the end. The best tennis-ball app is the one that gets out of your way and adapts to your game.

What to look for in a tennis-ball cricket app

Best apps for tennis-ball, tape-ball & gully cricket (2026)

1. CricFight — best all-rounder for informal cricket

CricFight doesn't force a format on you. Set your overs, pick your players, and score the match live ball by ball, whatever ball you're using. You get free player and team stats, a clean shareable scorecard, and — because it's a social cricket platform — you can also find local players and challenge rival teams. That combination of flexibility plus community is what makes it the strongest pick for tennis-ball cricket.

2. CricHeroes — deep scoring, formal-cricket leaning

CricHeroes is powerful and widely used, and it can certainly score a tennis-ball game. Its feature set and framing lean towards organised, formal cricket and leagues, so for a casual gully game it can feel like more machinery than you need. Great if your tennis-ball cricket is actually a structured tournament; heavier than necessary for a kickabout.

3. Pen, paper, or the notes app — free, but you lose everything

Plenty of tennis-ball cricket is still “scored” on a scrap of paper or someone's memory. It works for the afternoon, but the stats vanish, there's no shareable card, and next week's rivalry has no receipts. For a one-off, fine; for anything you want to remember, an app wins easily.

Scoring a tennis-ball cricket match live ball by ball on CricFight

Your overs, your format. Set the match up to match your game — a short box-cricket total or a longer tape-ball innings — and score every ball live. The scorecard and stats come out looking professional even when the pitch was a parking lot.

Turn a street rivalry into a fixture. Find other tennis-ball teams near you and send a challenge — then let the scorecard and leaderboards settle who's actually the best team in the area.

Challenging a rival tennis-ball cricket team near you on CricFight

Tennis-ball formats CricFight handles

FormatTypical setupOn CricFight
Tennis-ball / tape-ball6–20 overs, park or maidanSet overs, score live, full stats
Gully cricketFew overs, small sides, house rulesFlexible overs, quick scoring
Box / turf-arena cricketShort-format, indoor or nettedCustom overs, live scorecard
Tennis-ball tournamentMultiple teams, knockout or leagueFree tournament management

Box-cricket house rules (one-tip-one-hand, last-man-standing, etc.) are agreed between teams; the app records runs, wickets, overs, and the result for whatever rules you play.

👉 Score your next tennis-ball game on CricFight, free — set your overs, keep your stats, and challenge the next street over.

Does the format really change the app you need?

A little. Any decent app can tally runs. But tennis-ball cricket rewards flexibility — custom overs, small sides, casual setups — and a community layer, because these games live and die on local rivalries and turnout. An app that insists on formal cricket makes a park game feel like paperwork. One built for grassroots, like CricFight, just fits. If you also run organised events, our guide to organising a cricket tournament for free covers fixtures, points tables, and net run rate for tennis-ball cups too.

The bottom line

The best cricket app for tennis-ball, tape-ball, gully and box cricket is the one that adapts to your game instead of forcing a format, keeps your stats, and helps you find your next opponent. That's CricFight — built for grassroots cricket exactly as it's really played, and free.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a cricket app for tennis-ball cricket?
Yes. CricFight works for tennis-ball cricket as well as tape-ball, gully, and box cricket. You set your own overs and score any format live, ball by ball, then get full stats and a shareable scorecard — the same tools formal matches use, for informal cricket.

Can I score tape-ball or gully cricket on an app?
Yes. Tape-ball and gully matches are scored on CricFight exactly like any other match: choose your overs, record each ball live, and get a professional scorecard and player stats. The app doesn't assume red-ball or a fixed format, so it fits informal cricket.

What is the best app for box cricket?
CricFight is a strong choice for box cricket because it's flexible: you set the number of overs to match your short-format game, score live, and track team and player stats. Box-specific house rules are agreed between teams, and the app records the runs, wickets, and result.

Do cricket scoring apps work for informal matches?
Many are built around formal cricket, but CricFight is designed for grassroots and informal play. Custom overs, live scoring, free stats, and the ability to find and challenge nearby teams make it suit tennis-ball, tape-ball, gully, and box cricket, not just league matches.

Is there a free app for local tennis-ball cricket?
Yes. CricFight is free for tennis-ball and all local cricket. Live scoring, stats, scorecards, team building, and challenges cost nothing and carry no ads; its premium store runs on in-app coins you earn by playing, never real money.

Nikhil Mishra

Written by

Nikhil Mishra

Nikhil Mishra is the visionary behind CricFight. A technology entrepreneur who previously worked at Paytm and went on to found Opsyra, he pairs a builder's instinct with a weekend cricketer's frustration: he launched CricFight in 2024 after struggling to find a scoring app fast enough to use mid-over during a local club match. What started as a weekend project quickly grew into a platform used by teams across India. As CEO, Nikhil drives the product vision, community strategy, and ensures CricFight stays true to its mission: professional-grade cricket tools for every team, forever free. He's the first to admit he is no professional cricketer — just someone who plays the amateur weekend game and wanted it recorded properly. His belief is simple — every match deserves to be remembered, not just the ones on TV.

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