The Hundred: Why 2024 season is ECB's 'shop window' for investment

What will England’s 100-ball competition look like in 2025 after ‘Project Gemini’ is complete?

Matt Roller23-Jul-2024Fireworks, live music and a sold-out Oval crowd will herald the Hundred’s return on Tuesday, but there will be just as much interest in what is happening in the hospitality suites as on the pitch. The ECB plan to use the competition’s fourth season as a shop window for potential investors into the eight teams and have invited the “best in world sport” for a look.The governing body rejected a significant offer from a private equity firm, Bridgepoint Capital, to buy a controlling stake in the Hundred in late 2022 and have spent the past 18 months discussing the tournament’s future. Last year, they launched ‘Project Gemini’ to develop their preferred option: a revamped Hundred, with external investors buying stakes in the eight teams in time for the 2025 season.”We’ve seen a huge amount of demand from different kinds of investors,” says Vikram Banerjee, who is running the project as the ECB’s head of business operations. “I would really hope that we have a level of partnerships with some IPL teams… but at the same time, we’ve just sent out a document and a video to some NFL owners that explains what cricket is and what the rules are.”The sales process will not start until late this year but informal talks have been going on for months. Banerjee travelled to India earlier this year and has spoken to the owners of every IPL and WPL franchise “a number of times”. There is also interest further afield: “Interested parties have contacted us from Australia, South Africa, Pakistan, USA and India,” says Andrew Umbers, the co-founder of Oakwell Sports Advisory.Potential investors watching the 2024 edition will see that the Hundred has a solid base. It attracts strong crowds – around 580,000 tickets were sold last year, across 34 matchdays – and has support from both terrestrial (BBC) and subscription (Sky Sports) broadcasters, while the men’s and women’s double-headers have proved to be a hugely successful model.Related

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But it also has major issues: the first week of the men’s competition will play second-fiddle to England’s third Test against West Indies, and squads are further depleted by the final stages of Major League Cricket. “We can see who our competitors are in the English summer and we need to be in a position not just to compete but to win,” says Richard Gould, the ECB’s chief executive.”They’ll want to demonstrate that this is already a competition that’s attracting lots of new fans, and that if you are able to invest more in talent, it could be even bigger,” says Omar Chaudhuri of Twenty First Group, who worked with the ECB on the men’s high-performance review and the revamp of the women’s domestic game. “The pitch has to be: we’ve got this thing that is already good, and we can supercharge it and turn it into something really great with a little bit of money well spent.”Gould said there are “no active discussions” around changing the competition’s format – from 100 balls per side to T20 – but suggested that two new franchises are likely to be added from 2029, when a new broadcast rights cycle starts. “There is an ambition within the game that we would like to see the competition expand at some point,” he said.

How will the process work?

The ECB say that the formal process will begin in the first half of September, “building off that momentum that, hopefully, is created from the tournament,” Banerjee adds. They have appointed financial advisors in Deloitte, one of the ‘big four’ accountancy firms, and the Raine Group, the American bank involved in the recent sales of Chelsea to Todd Boehly and a minority stake in Manchester United to Jim Ratcliffe.The Hundred’s process will be significantly more complicated than recent precedents, such as the BCCI’s auction of two new IPL franchises in 2021. First, the ECB will hand 51% stakes to the eight Hundred ‘hosts’ – seven counties and, in the case of London Spirit, Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC). Then, the hosts will decide whether they wish to sell some, all or none of their stake. Finally, bids will be invited from private investors.”It won’t be ‘everyone put a big number in an envelope, hand the envelope in, and the eight biggest numbers win,'” Banerjee says. “I’m not going to sit here and say that money’s not important, and we don’t want money coming in. Of course it is, and it’s an opportunity to create fantastic seed funding for the financial sustainability of the whole sport.”But alongside that, how are they going to support English cricket? We’ve got a process that will last three months that will ask partners for, yes, numbers and financials, but also all these qualitative things… it’s a bit more complicated, but the reason for the complication is to ensure we have the right outcome for English cricket in the long term.”The ECB want to process finished in time for the 2025 season•ECB/Getty Images

Slow progress

The ECB’s ambition is to have the details finalised ahead of next year’s draft, but there have already been frustrations with the process from prospective investors. The reported last week that interest had cooled due to a lack of clarity; Gould said it was “fascinating” to see potential buyers trying “to negotiate through the media”. One source told ESPNcricinfo: “The ECB have screwed up, haven’t they?”Some hosts have already held meaningful talks with prospective buyers but the key question is around control, whether that relates to branding, commercial opportunities, naming rights, or cricket operations. “One of the biggest things for any investor, in any sport, is governance and the route to actually getting things done,” Chaudhuri explains.”As much as you can grow the value of your own club through performance, there’s a lot you rely on outside that, with what the league or the governing body is doing. That is hard to do due diligence on: you could speak to people at a county and get a sense of whether you can work with them, but it’s very hard to get a sense of what that looks like across every other team.”Some prospective investors are unclear whether they should be speaking more to counties or to the ECB itself. “They need to be clear on the process and explain where the value is in English cricket,” Umbers says. “They have to detail how governance will surround these new ownership structures, and that the process of sale is going to be determined by the ECB and not the first-class counties.”

The missing one percent

The prospect of owning a minority stake in a franchise – with Surrey among the hosts to indicate they intend to retain their 51% – may not prove attractive to owners. An official at one IPL franchise told ESPNcricinfo that they had no real interest in spending tens of millions of pounds simply to become a “passive investor” with no meaningful control over a team.”It’s going to be a massive challenge for any of these investors not to have a majority stake,” says Adam Sommerfeld, the managing partner of Certus Capital who advise private equity firms on sports investments. “The question will be, can private equity get the returns that they need from these assets? They’re not going to get five-times returns on it.”But hosts could also propose a model where a 49% stakeholder still takes a significant level of control, whether that be over cricketing operations or naming rights and branding. There is recent precedent for this in England’s Premier League: Jim Ratcliffe and his company Ineos own 27.7% of Manchester United, but control the club’s football operations.”You are going to see some different structures of first-class counties separating commercial and economic control,” Umbers says. “You are less attracted to invest in any company or franchise if you are not able to influence where the monies are being spent. That’s why there will be different structures: you see this all the time in private equity in sport, for example with CVC in rugby.”Will IPL owners want to become minority stakeholders in Hundred teams?•Getty Images for ECB

What is a franchise worth?

There will be a significant disparity between the prices of the eight franchises depending on where they are based: clearly, there will be more parties interested in owning a team based at an iconic venue in London which seats 30,000 people (London Spirit) than at a stadium half the size in Cardiff (Welsh Fire). Umbers estimates that the franchises – taking a 100% valuation – could be worth anywhere between £30-120 million.Yet in the short term, teams’ revenue will come primarily from central broadcast income and the draft will ensure that costs are fixed. It means that the smaller teams could prove to be the shrewdest investments. “There’s a big difference between ‘open’ and ‘closed’ leagues,” Chaudhuri says. “In a closed league, revenues are generally distributed pretty evenly and there’s no potential downside of relegation.”That means if you acquire a smaller brand, you have the opportunity to turn it into a much bigger one: there’s no real downside to getting things wrong if you experiment a bit more. A really smart investor could buy Welsh Fire or Southern Brave for a lower price and say, ‘we are really going to double down on performance here, because our brand is not going to carry us globally’ – and that could prove to be quite profitable.”The early indications are that around half of the eight Hundred franchises could have investment from IPL owners, with Reliance – who own Mumbai Indians – said to be early favourites to buy a stake in London Spirit. “Ideally, you’d want a group of owners that not only have the ability to invest in and grow their own teams, but also have the desire to work together and collaborate,” Chaudhuri says.The ECB are also conscious of avoiding a single franchise becoming too dominant and powerful, with Banerjee citing the example of Manchester City in the Premier League. “We can learn from that and go, how do we put those protections and controls in place now to make sure that those [things] don’t happen? That’s the work I’m doing at the moment… we can learn from all the different sports around the world.”London Spirit are expected to be the most valuable franchise•Alex Davidson/Getty Images

The women’s Hundred

Even the Hundred’s harshest critics would not contest that it has accelerated the growth of women’s cricket in England and Wales. “The Hundred has helped provide an outstanding platform to boost the visibility of the women’s game, and given more opportunities to showcase exceptional female athletes,” says Tammy Parlour, the CEO of the Women’s Sport Trust.The Trust’s research found that 1.3 million people – around one-fifth of the Hundred’s total TV audience in the UK – only watched games in the women’s competition, and indicated this could be even higher with access to primetime slots. “Games broadcast in the evening have received more viewers than those shown in the afternoon,” Parlour says. “Visibility drives engagement, so it’s important that women’s sport is given access to more of these prominent platforms.”Umbers believes that the double-header model is “incredibly appealing” to prospective buyers. “The investors we have been speaking to are absolutely interested in, and want to back, the growth of women’s cricket within the Hundred,” he says. Chaudhuri, meanwhile, believes that a genuine interest in the women’s competition must be “a red line” for potential owners.

Why now?

Within three seasons, the Hundred has gone from competing for talent with one other men’s short-form league between July and September to three, with MLC and Canada’s relaunched Global T20 joining the pre-existing CPL. “We need to be able to ensure that we retain our best players,” Gould says. “If we were to delay too much, others may end up stealing a march on us that would be to our disadvantage.”Banerjee believes cricket is experiencing “a moment” that makes it particularly attractive to investors. “If you take a step back, globally, cricket’s in a really great place… we need to move – and move relatively quickly – to make sure that we have that truly world-class, global tournament. That comes with investment into tribalism and investment into those players.”England’s home international season also underlines why the ECB invested in the Hundred in the first place: in both the women’s and men’s games, the relatively weak line-up of touring teams has seen English cricket struggle to attract much interest outside of its core fanbase, particularly while competing against European Championship football and, next month, the Olympics.Pat Cummins chose Major League Cricket over the Hundred•MLC”If there aren’t meaningful narratives in the international game then it is hard for fans to stay engaged,” Chaudhuri says. “In the domestic game, you have more ability to engineer things by attracting top talent through salaries, ensuring competitive balance… you can make sure that your product stays healthy. It’s much harder to do that in the international game if it’s not a summer where India or Australia are here for a Test series.”The ECB have also watched other boards miss opportunities to attract private investment. “The Hundred is going to be ahead of every other tournament outside the IPL,” Shane Watson, the former Australia allrounder, tells ESPNcricinfo. “Good on them for having the foresight to try and get some of the smartest people in world sport involved who really know how to grow it.”Watson has been hugely frustrated by Cricket Australia’s reluctance to follow the same course of action with the Big Bash League. “They should have done it six years ago, minimum,” he says. “Things were going incredibly well, and then the powers that be butchered it by putting too many games on and extending the season. They’re trying to reel that back, but the horse has already bolted.”English cricket has already had that experience with short-form cricket once before: the ECB brought T20 to the professional game in 2003, but lacked the vision for it that India showed in launching the IPL five years later. The Hundred’s sale process is not only an attempt to raise funds, but to avoid repeating the same old mistakes.

'Worth the hours, worth the sacrifice' – SA savour subcontinent high after a decade's wait

They hadn’t conquered Asia since 2014, and following their series win in Bangladesh, South Africa are setting sights on higher honours

Firdose Moonda31-Oct-2024It still matters. Winning away from home matters. Winning in the subcontinent matters. Doing both those things as a country that is now seen as one of the Test nations matters most of all, as South Africa have just experienced.Don’t buy into the talk that it’s only Bangladesh, a place where South Africa have never lost a Test and look at the bigger picture. For the last ten years, the subcontinent has been all but insurmountable. Between September 2014 and September 2024, Australia, England, New Zealand, South Africa and West Indies collectively played 35 series in the subcontinent and won just six. Of those, England were responsible for three series (Sri Lanka 2018 and 2021 and Pakistan in 2022) while South Africa lost all four series they played.To be able to finally change that is something South Africa’s stand-in captain Aiden Markram described in an understated way as “very special,” while also recognising the significance it has in serving as a marker of progress.”For us as a group of players, we’ve never won a game or a series in the subcontinent so that makes it very special. It’s been a tough journey at times and to slowly be progressing is a really good thing for us,” he said.Related

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The last time South Africa conquered Asia was in 2014, at the latter end of a dream run that saw them go nine years unbeaten on the road. At the time, Markram was fresh off captaining the under-19 side to the age-group title in the UAE and the future looked bright. They didn’t know it then, but things were already changing.Big-name retirements started with Jacques Kallis in 2013 and every year since then someone else who was considered essential to success stepped away. As recently as last December, former captain and stalwart opener Dean Elgar called it a day which means South Africa have been in transition for almost ten years. The subcontinent became an impossible place to win as South Africa experienced in India in 2015 and 2019, in Sri Lanka in 2018 and in Pakistan in 2021. Of course, it’s not as though SENA countries hadn’t been making use of their own home advantage for decades so they had nothing to complain about, but it didn’t make the losses hurt any less.South Africa’s batting has paid the highest price for that. Since May 2018, they do have a single Test batter with an average over 40 which includes all of the current squad. Tony de Zorzi, thanks to his 177, and David Bedingham, with a hundred and three fifties, are close but both have only played eight Tests.What that means is that South Africa didn’t often have hundreds, which is something they had to play down and Markram is still singing from that hymn book.”As for numbers, it’s all quite relative. You look at different surfaces that you play on, wickets around the world are so different from each other and have so many different types of challenges that you face as a batter so it can be tough to pump that average up but we don’t speak about numbers,” Markram said. “We just speak about making an impact on the game and there can be a time where scoring 60 or 70 is match-winning and then there will be times where big hundreds runs are match-winning.”In this series, the latter was the case. From Kyle Verreynne in Mirpur to de Zorzi, Tristan Stubbs and Wiaan Mulder in Chittagong, South Africa’s wins were built on big runs which gave their attack a lot to work with. And while there is some sense in what Markram said in that an individual stacking up hundreds may not necessarily equate to a successful team, he also recognised the need for a collective progression in performance.”I’m certainly not too fazed about numbers and I don’t think the rest of the guys are either. It’s one of those things that will take care of itself if you put in good performances consistently. Naturally the numbers will lift. We’re all definitely striving towards that but trying to be more consistent and trying to have a good impact on the game.”With South Africa’s batters focused on the efficacy and not the amount of their runs, it was hardly surprising to hear the leader of their attack, Kagiso Rabada, also play down his own importance. Asked about being back at No.1 on the ICC rankings or taking 300 wickets in his post-match interview, Rabada glossed over that the game “moves on”.Aiden Markram believes South Africa have the players required to reach the WTC final•AFP/Getty Images”You have to keep working hard. don’t look at where I am on the rankings,” he said, acknowledging it is a “good motivator to keep going.” His highest praise was for his team-mates, who he said are all “willing to put their hands up,” to drive success.And they can see the rewards in front of them. Despite playing fewer Tests than almost anyone else in this cycle, they’re in with a chance of making the final. They see the potential to make that happen as brimming with possibility. “We don’t really know what the ceiling is because we haven’t managed to lift the trophy,” Markram said.That’s also one way of South Africa looking at their empty accolades cupboard and wondering whether it will ever fill up. They’ve taken the approach that the things they are capable of are still coming and this year has shown them that.They reached the final of the T20 World Cup in June and now their chance to reach the WTC final lies in their hands. It’s proof that something is working, that the talent pool is starting to play to their potential and that maybe, the impossible could become possible.”We believe that we have the players in the country to be able to do so but by no means will it be easy,” Markram said. “The journey itself has been incredibly difficult but worth the fight, worth the hours, worth the sacrifice. That’s pretty much how we see it.”

Ayush Mhatre: Another Mumbai teenager with dazzling potential

The 17-year-old made his maiden first-class century playing his third game, against Maharashtra in the Ranji Trophy

Vishal Dikshit18-Oct-2024The Bandra-Kurla Complex (BKC) isn’t like the rest of Mumbai. In a city where poverty and opulence co-exist without any tangible borders, the BKC is an upmarket commercial hub embellished with offices of multinational companies, high rises adorned by modern-day reflective glass, five-star hotels, upscale restaurants and lavish offices of some of the top banks of the country. Against the backdrop of a metro, its chaos and congestion, this place feels as if it was planted there like a drop-in pitch.And in the middle of this swanky complex stood a 17-year-old boy on Friday who was a bit different to everybody that was around him too. He had been toiling in the scorching sun for close to four hours, sweating to earn each and every run for his team, getting his whites dirty, and physically proving his worth surrounded by people much older – some twice his age.Ayush Mhatre’s face still has a boyish roundness to it. It was hard to miss when he took his helmet off after scoring his maiden century in only his third first-class game and held his arms aloft facing the Mumbai dressing room.Mhatre is the latest from Mumbai’s production line that rolls out promising youngsters ever ready to step up when the first-choice players are unavailable. Two years ago, when the likes of Yashasvi Jaiswal and Sarfaraz Khan were away for national duty for the last couple of seasons, a 17-year-old Musheer Khan made his Ranji Trophy debut. And now when Musheer is out injured after a car accident last month, another 17-year-old has stepped in in his place, almost like he was packed and ready in a warehouse in BKC.Mhatre embodies the struggle of the average Mumbaikar. To chase his cricket dreams, he has had to travel nearly 80 kilometers one way by train from Virar (outside Mumbai) to Churchgate (next to Wankhede Stadium) to access the famed and cricket coaches. He was always supported by his parents to pursue this dream, and it was his (maternal grandfather) and then his (father’s younger brother) who chaperoned him on his journey into the city so he could have it all.Mhatre took the game up when he was five, but it was at 15 that he really began to think that the runs he was piling up in school and club cricket could be done professionally. His personal highest score stands at 254 not out, in a private tournament, and he “gained a lot of confidence” in playing the Kalpesh Koli Under-16 tournament in Mumbai. By December 2023, he had made it to Mumbai’s Under-23 squad for the CK Nayudu Trophy and was also named in MCA’s Under-19 team of the year for 2023-24.Ayush Mhatre is unbeaten on 127 against Maharashtra•PTI At the start of this season, still in Class XII, Mhatre had an inkling that a Mumbai call-up was coming. He was asked to take part in the red-ball KSCA Thimmappiah Tournament, which several players use to tune up for the start of a new Ranji season. There, he smashed 173 against Gujarat and 52 in the next game opposite Andhra. He also started prepping for the challenges fast bowling could throw at him in first-class cricket by batting against plastic balls on tiles with Prashant Shetty, who has coached many Mumbai players including Prithvi Shaw and Jemimah Rodrigues. Eventually, when the call came for the Irani Cup clash against Rest of India, after Musheer had met with an accident, Mhatre was mentally ready.”I was surprised, but there was no pressure, I was excited,” he said on Friday.Mhatre scored 19 and 14 against the likes of Mukesh Kumar and Yash Dayal, and as soon as the Ranji Trophy season started, he took no time to register his maiden first-class half-century against Baroda, top-scoring with 52 on a spicy surface in Mumbai’s first innings when only one other team-mate crossed 30.On Friday, batting on his home turf, after Maharashtra had been bowled out for just 126, Mhatre saw off the new ball while Shaw and Hardik Tamore fell cheaply, and he stitched useful partnerships with his captain Ajinkya Rahane and Shreyas Iyer to power the score past 200.He reveres his Mumbai senior Rohit Sharma – also from the suburbs – for his trademark pulls and timing, and almost as a tribute to him, Mhatre pulled a short ball so handsomely towards the Bank of America building towering over the ground that the Mumbai dressing room erupted in applause. He seems comfortable off both the front and the back foot – the straight bat drives and the confident cuts showed as much. There was rarely a lull when he was at the crease, his strike rate hovering around 75 as he brought up a half-century off 63 balls and his century off 133 balls. Eighty of his 127 runs came on the off side.”The first hundred is always special,” he said after the day’s play. “I was confident which kept building in this innings.”Mhatre said Rahane coached him through a 99-run stand for the third wicket by setting “small targets of five runs at a time,” before he batted “calmly” with Iyer in an unbroken partnership of 97 as the field spread out and the baking sun made the pitch more batting friendly. Even at this nascent stage of his career, he understands he can’t get carried away even if he loves to attack.”I have to play with control, play according to what the situation demands, that’s what the team expects from me.”Mhatre has started with a bang, he has lived up to the promise he had shown in age-group cricket, and now he will want to stay true to the character of a promising Mumbai batter and really make it big.

Australia go from sunshine to gloom, like they have before against India

Australia are still in control of the game, but the clouds of doubt have reappeared on the horizon for them

Alex Malcolm28-Dec-20241:31

Boland: ‘We’re still in a pretty strong position but could’ve been better’

In the glorious sunshine on a Saturday morning in Melbourne, Australia were in control of the game. Nathan Lyon had just pinned Ravindra Jadeja lbw to leave India 221 for 7, 253 behind with two days and two sessions remaining.Five hours later, Nitish Kumar Reddy walked off the MCG to a standing ovation from 83,073 people, unbeaten on 105 and India’s innings still 116 runs behind but alive and kicking, as the dark clouds of a rainstorm rolled in to end play early.From the brightness of the horizon to the impending gloom was an apt metaphor for Australia against India in recent years.Related

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They are still in control of the game, with two full days of set fair weather to come. But the clouds of doubt have appeared. They shouldn’t be there, but they are because they have seen this movie before. In Brisbane in 2021 and in Delhi in 2023 they were in control of the game, until lower-order century stands dragged India back into the contest and to eventual victory.It was noted yesterday after Steven Smith and Pat Cummins’ exemplary stand, that Australia had only produced four century stands for the seventh or lower wicket in the last ten years. India have produced four in the last four years against Australia alone. Only one other team, England, have managed one in that time against this Australian attack.The same man has been involved in two of them. Washington Sundar named his dog after the Gabba, having made 62 on debut in a 123-run seventh-wicket stand with Shardul Thakur that turned that game India’s way.Can you call a second dog MCG? He could do whatever he likes if India win from here following his 50 in a 127-run eighth-wicket stand with Reddy.The other lower-order century stands were produced by Axar Patel and R Ashwin in Delhi in 2023 and Thakur and Ajinkya Rahane in the World Test Championship final at The Oval only months later against this exact Australian bowling quartet of Cummins, Lyon, Mitchell Starc and Scott Boland. The only difference is that Mitchell Marsh is the allrounder at the MCG in place of the injured Cameron Green. That was the only one of the four that hasn’t cost them the game so far.2:10

Washington: Nitish’s hundred ‘will be remembered forever’

This one shouldn’t either. But how and why it keeps happening should be concerning to this Australian side.To be fair to Australia, they did exactly the same with the bat on day one. Two lower-order century stands, both against the second new ball, might point to an excessively flat pitch. But a man who knows MCG pitches would disagree.”I think it started off with a fair bit of nip in it, still a little bit of nip there at the moment,” Boland said. “Not as consistent as I’d like as a bowler, but I think it’s going to be a pretty good Test match wicket.”Boland knows a truly flat MCG pitch when he sees one, having played Sheffield Shield cricket in the pre-Matt Page era. The ongoing issues he manages in his left knee could well have resulted from slamming it repeatedly into the slab of concrete that used to sit underneath the drop-in trays here prior to 2018.Australia’s bowlers have been doing the heavy lifting for the team in recent times, but the repetitive nature of these stands against this opponent speaks to a couple of issues.India’s ability to nullify Lyon is a major reason why the tail continues to frustrate Australia. Against every other opponent, Lyon can lock down an end when the hardness of the new ball wears off. His frugality, and his ability to threaten batters with spin and bounce in Australian conditions allows Cummins to set and forget and rotate his three quicks in short bursts at the other end to ensure they sustain their pace and quality.Ravindra Jadeja was trapped by a quicker one from Nathan Lyon•AFP/Getty ImagesBut Lyon has been almost completely shut out of this series so far. He has five wickets at 53.60, striking at 114. Two of those bookended the stand between Reddy and Washington. In between times, Reddy scored 44 off 60 against Lyon including three fours and a six.It meant Cummins had to manage his bowlers differently and he made some odd decisions. Boland, who had easily been Australia’s best having removed Virat Kohli and Rishabh Pant, was hardly used in the early part of Reddy’s innings. He went from 1 off 2 to 56 off 90 before Boland returned to the attack.Straight after an hour-long rain delay, the likes of which had enabled Cummins and Starc to continue to bowl in Brisbane, Marsh bowled a three-over spell in tandem with Starc, instead of Cummins or Boland, when the pitch had become more difficult to bat on according to Washington.”Coming off that break we tried to take them a bit wider with the ball,” Boland said. “We obviously set a seven-two field and try to see if they want to flash their hands outside the off stump.”Marsh conceded just four runs. But it only served to massage his figures from 0 for 24 from four overs to 0 for 28 from seven. Since taking 2 for 12 in the first innings of the series in Perth, Marsh has figures of 25-1-1-125.There were some slightly odd bowling changes on Pat Cummins’ part•Associated PressIt was no surprise then to see Starc grimacing with some back soreness as he shouldered the load at the other end. He never left the field and continued to bowl at high pace despite getting the physio to check his back at fine leg between overs.Starc was part of a three-man attack that took 20 wickets in Adelaide, and a three-man attack that did all of the bowling in Brisbane after Josh Hazlewood broke down.”He’s okay,” Boland said. “I think he just had a bit of a niggle somewhere in his back or rib, I don’t know. But he came out after the break and was bowling 140kph so I think he’s going to be fine. I think he’s underrated for how tough he is.”Four years ago, Australia’s quicks got to the line in the fourth Test having shouldered a heavy load in Melbourne and Sydney, only to run out of gas in Brisbane.”We’re leading by 115 runs, so in a pretty strong position,” Boland said. “Obviously, it could have been better, but I think that’s Test match cricket. It ebbs and flows. Yeah, hopefully tomorrow morning, we get that first wicket, and then put on a really nice lead and see how the game plays after that.”There shouldn’t be cause for alarm in Australia’s dressing room. But no one could blame them if there wasn’t a looming sense of déjà vu.

Ishan Kishan fits SRH mould with a 'remember-me?' knock

If SRH had a bit of a hole at No. 3 last season, they may have found the perfect candidate to fill it this time around

Karthik Krishnaswamy23-Mar-20252:46

Rapid fire: Are Kishan and SRH a perfect match?

Did you see that?Did you see Abhishek Sharma step out, realise that Fazalhaq Farooqi had followed him with a bouncer into his body, and still have the time to lean back, manufacture room, and carve the ball over backward point?Did you see Sanju Samson hook Mohammed Shami for six, and slap and chop him either side of point for a pair of surgical first-over fours?Did you see Dhruv Jurel welcome Pat Cummins to IPL 2025 with a 90m six over long-on, with a bat-swing like the smoothest golf drive?Related

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This was quite a match if you were a top-order batter, keeper-batter, or keeper-batter who bats in the top three and has been part of India’s recent T20I squads. Abhishek and Samson are India’s current opening pair in the format, and Jurel their reserve keeper in their most recent series.Between them, they scored 160 off 83 balls.It wasn’t quite the match for Yashasvi Jaiswal, but it could so easily have been that. If he had uppercut Simarjeet Singh a few inches higher, or if Abhinav Manohar had mistimed his jump at point by a few milliseconds, you might be reading an open-mouthed appreciation of his gifts.2:06

‘Kishan hammered everyone to every corner’

India’s T20I present was there, as was India’s all-format future, in a clash between Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) and Rajasthan Royals (RR) that produced an aggregate of 528 runs, the second-highest in IPL history.The defining innings of this match, however, came from someone else – another top-order batter who keeps wickets, who could easily be a defining face of India’s present and is young enough to be their future too, but whose innings on this day, for complicated reasons, felt like a blast from the past.A blast, perhaps, from November 2023, when Ishan Kishan was India’s Test keeper in the long-term absence of Rishabh Pant; their back-up opener in ODIs, with a double-hundred in that format; and possibly their first-choice T20I keeper, with his last three innings in that format including two blistering fifties against Australia.November 2023 wasn’t all that long ago, but try measuring that in Indian cricket time. The Kishan of March 2025 is a cricketer who hasn’t played for India in nearly 16 months and is out of the BCCI’s central contracts list. Others have taken his place in India’s squads, and taken full ownership of their roles. Time has stood still for Kishan, seemingly, and Indian cricket has simply kept moving.An unfettered version of Ishan Kishan was on show on his SRH debut•BCCIBut then, he’s only 26. And did you see that?Did you see Kishan step out to Maheesh Theekshana on Sunday afternoon and send him whistling over the ducking umpire’s head with that trademark, unfettered follow-through? Did you wonder why the sight of this familiar figure kitted out in unfamiliar colours made so much sense?The shot brought up SRH’s fifty, and it was just the fourth over of their innings. It was just the third ball Kishan had faced. Travis Head and Abhishek had put on 45 in 3.1 overs, and it made so much sense that another no-holds-barred intent machine would follow them to the crease. This has been the SRH way since their revolutionary 2024 season, and this has always been the Kishan way.Interviewed between innings, Kishan gave a glowing endorsement of the SRH management, particularly their captain Pat Cummins, and if you were so inclined, you could have listened to his words and heard less-than-glowing assessments of previous captains and managements.”The captain especially, the skipper in our team is just giving a lot of freedom to everyone, doesn’t matter if you get a lot of runs or if you get out early. [As long as] you’re doing everything for the team, it’s all fair, and that is the confidence every player needs, so hats off to him, and hats off to the management.”Now everyone says pretty much the same things about the captains and managements they happen to play for, but SRH can only play the way they do if they fully empower their batters to keep taking the high-risk option. There’s a clarity to how Abhishek and Head bat, a seeming absence of the thought of failure or its consequences, and Kishan, at his best, plays the same way.Ishan Kishan slammed his first IPL hundred•BCCIOn 25, for example, he went after a short ball from Sandeep Sharma that was angled away from him, aiming for the gap to the left of deep point. The ball bounced a little more than ideal for this horizontal-bat slap, and there was perhaps less width than ideal, but Kishan threw himself into the shot. He didn’t quite middle it, and was perhaps lucky that the ball didn’t quite carry to the fielder. But from the way he played that shot, it was clear it would have been okay for him to get out that way.On 39, he leaned across to the off side to try and scoop Jofra Archer over short fine leg, and this shot was almost entirely premeditation, hugely dependent on guesswork as to the bowler’s intended line and length. He guessed the line right, but not quite the length, and only managed a top-edge, but it went for six anyway.It’s precisely this sort of educated abandonment of control that unlocks the ability for teams to score at 14 or 15 an over as SRH did right through their innings. It was the first ball of the over, and Kishan had shown Archer he was coming for him, no matter what. Under these circumstances, the bowler running in can’t just think of the field he’s set and the line and length he wants to bowl, but also the means by which the batter can manipulate those things. Kishan hit two more sixes in that Archer over, the 13th of the SRH innings, and they too were all about manipulation – both times he stepped away to the leg side and freed his arms to launch full balls aimed at the base of the stumps over the cover point boundary.Kishan hit 11 fours and six sixes in all, and while some of these flew unstoppably off the middle of his bat, there were others that could count as miscues or chancy hits that could have led to his dismissal on other days. Those, though, were in one sense his best shots of the day, because they fully captured the spirit of his innings: that top-edged scoop that put Archer under pressure; that low full-toss that was close to being a well-executed wide yorker, stabbed off the toe-end to just elude mid-off; the collapsed back-knee slog-sweep that barely cleared deep square leg.This is the SRH way, and this is the Kishan way. If they had a bit of a hole at No. 3 last season, they may have found the perfect candidate to fill it this time around. And along the way, he could yet find a way to force himself back into conversations about India’s present and future.

Rock and Roll It podcast: What's the best way to manage Bumrah and other India fast bowlers?

Our crew takes a deep dive into the situation of India’s current crop of fast bowlers, the behind-the-scenes set-up to look after them, and how to create new fast bowlers

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Aug-2025As the fans continue to wallow in the warm memories of the fiery Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, India’s fast bowlers, such as Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj, Akash Deep, and others, get some well-deserved rest this month. Which of them plays the Asia Cup next month and which one doesn’t is a question for later. For now, the trio of Sidharth Monga, Karthik Krishnaswamy and Dustin Silgardo get together to discuss the workload management of India’s fast bowling contingent: what’s the best way to manage Bumrah; is there a fitness issue with Akash Deep; how should the BCCI – the selectors, the NCA and the coaches – prepare a bench strength for the quicks? Listen to the latest episode of here:

KKR CEO Venky Mysore: 'Russell agonised over leaving KKR'

Venky Mysore reveals why the franchise decided to release Russell before he announced his IPL retirement and took over as KKR’s power coach

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi05-Dec-20258:03

Will KKR go all-out to for Cameron Green?

Was releasing Andre Russell, or ‘Muscle Russell’ as Shah Rukh Khan called him, a last-minute decision? Can you now disclose why you decided to release him?
Venky Mysore: I wish there was no auction every year because this just becomes very nerve-wracking many times, and some things that you don’t want to do, you end up having to do. But no, it wasn’t like a last, last-minute thing, but we were grappling with all combinations, ideas, what to do and all that. Finally, we said, okay, this [release] is what we have to do.But some people missed the fundamental point, which is the [purse] deduction for us was 18 crore, not 12 crore by releasing Dre. So, although his contract value was 12 crore, the deduction from our purse was 18 crore in 2025. A lot of people missed that and said, oh, why would KKR not see value in a person who is at 12 crores? 18 crores, which would be deducted from our purse if we had reattained him, is a lot of money in the context of an auction. That was the trigger.And in mini-auctions, you want to go with as much as you can to have the flexibility to look at options that might come your way. So from that perspective, if it was 12 crore, I think the decision would’ve been very different.If the deduction was 12 crore, would you have retained him?
Mysore: I mean it would have made a huge difference. Although 12 cr is still a lot, but could we get a player of his quality for 12 cr in the auction? It’s very unlikely in a mini auction (if you release him at that price). But releasing 18 cr, from the auction purse, it’s a fair amount of money. Therefore it was not a last-minute decision. It was a last-minute announcement.You are also trying to figure out what the alternatives would be. When you put someone in an auction, you have to go with an assumption you may not be able to get a player back. So if that’s the case, then what are your options? How do you resolve it? What’s your structure? All those discussions happen. So yes, in the days leading up to the retention deadline, we made the call.What was Russell’s reaction?
Mysore: Although we have never had to put him [Russell] in the auction, these discussions happen every time there’s a retention opportunity and it happened even ahead of a mega-auction. Particularly last year because the whole fee structure was very different and very, very punitive. If you retained more than three players, then you were penalised literally because fourth player retention slab was 18 crore, like Dre.So you are trying to do the math and say, can I get this player for 18 crore or less in the auction? We don’t want to obviously let any of our players go. Therefore I had the discussion this time with Dre and said, we may have to do this (release). And he said, “wow, never been in an auction since 2014.” Because before that he was with Delhi [Daredevils]. Then we picked him and since then he’s never been been in an auction. So it’s a strange feeling for both of us. And he’s always a very sensible and sensitive guy, easy to communicate with. Very emotional, but not clinical, like a few players I have dealt with.It hit him after a couple of days after that conversation. He came back to me and said, “oh, I’ve really had a lot of sleepless nights wondering about where all of this could go. I’m so used to the purple and gold, Knight Riders and relationships I have built with the franchise, you and the owners.”We jokingly discussed, and many people know that over the last 11 years that he’s been with us, I’ve probably spoken with Dre more than I’ve spoken with my wife. We sent him to Dallas [to train with local NFL team] twice to help him become more fitter, more stronger. When he was handed the year-long anti-doping ban in 2017, I was very much in touch and sent our physio from TKR – Trinbago Knight Riders – to Jamaica to work with Dre and help him with his fitness and more importantly, just to keep him in the right spirits. It was a tough year for him when a cricketer can’t play. Imagine one year was a very long time, but then right after that was a retention year in 2018.Andre Russell has been a match-winner for KKR – both with bat and ball•BCCIWe didn’t know what form he was in, what fitness level he was in, but we retained him. But he always acknowledges that and always says, “I’ve tears in my eyes because I got a million-dollar contract and retention decision on him.”All that kind of hit him after about 48 hours of the initial conversation on releasing him. Then the auction discussions started in a way, to say, how do we handle it? What happens? And all that.At that point, he had not yet given up on coming to the auction? Your conversation was on him getting released – correct?
Mysore: Exactly. I’ve had a few of these types of conversations over the 15 years I’ve been running the franchise. Very rarely do players feel like they are done. They always feel like, oh yeah, I’ve got cricket left in me – one year, two years, three years…that’s where his [Russell’s] head was also. And he’s probably right, but he also realised by the time 2026 IPL comes around, he’ll be 38. And for someone who’s an allrounder like him, a pace bowler who comes in at death, has to smash, has to run a lot, field like he does, his instincts take over once he is on the field. He’s a natural athlete, but body and age do catch up.But somewhere that conversation [retiring from IPL] did come up as an option and he gave it more thought. For a variety of reasons, it appealed to him and said, yeah, why not? Let’s do this.Was it your suggestion or his?
Mysore: I could see he (Russell) was agonising over it, and, so when I shared this with SRK [Shah Rukh, KKR lead owner], it was actually SRK’s suggestion of offering Russell a coaching role. Because, see, a player is thinking somewhere at the back of his mind, what happens after I hang up my boots? But I don’t think they want to think about it also so much because professional athletes are like that. They believe I’m still good, and Dre still is – he is fantastic and playing other leagues.Yesterday (December 3, in the ILT20 match between Abu Dhabi Knight Riders and Sharjah Warriorz) also, he came in and straightaway smashed that six, which are trademark Dre sixes, which hits the sight screen and the ball comes back to the middle of the pitch literally. You start thinking, oh my God! And even with the ball, runs in first ball, clean bowled DK [Dinesh Karthik].It just felt like he was very free in his mind after making the retirement decision. Because the guy took a couple of catches, is sliding and diving and throwing. I sent him a note later, saying “what’s going on here, Dre? How you doing power coach?” I was kidding him. Everybody has started calling him power coach and I think he loves it. We’re very happy. I think he’s very happy. He’s completely accepted it, come to terms with it.Power coach – Russell said it was your idea. He has not coached anywhere, so how did that come about?
Mysore: It was almost a spur of the moment thought. We were talking what role he could best do and I said: what are you best known for? It is your ability to come in and finish games with very few balls left and go from ball one. With his bowling as well, he has always been one of these enforcer type of bowlers. Then fielding also, I’ve never seen somebody as athletic as him. I mean now it’s different, but when he was younger, if he was the guy on the boundary line, anyone who hit the ball to him wouldn’t venture to run a two because he used to be so quick and slide and pick up and throw and he was so powerful.The image of him when he walks in itself is like, oh my God, here he comes. There’s going to be some power hitting now. I said to him: “what can you help us, help the team the most with is all your experience and skills. When you bring them together, it’s all about power, every thing that you did.” So I said, “we will call you power coach.”Actually that put a smile on his face, and Dre said, “maan, that sounds really good.” And it’s probably the first of its kind that there’s such a terminology given to someone who can come in and help. So it’s more than coaching, it’s also a lot about communicating with certain types of players who are going to play that role, which Dre was playing so well, and basically talking about his experiences.KKR coaches used to always make him talk, and even when I used to have informal conversations, I used to say: “what do you think? You are sitting in the dugout, 16 runs needed an over and when you walk in, what are you thinking?” He says, “I back myself to get those 15-16 runs an over because I feel like I can clear the boundary at least twice an over, so I’m calculating how many sixes are needed in the remaining balls in the innings.” That is unique how many people can actually do that.Andre Russell finished with 223 sixes in the IPL•Getty ImagesYes, only a few have managed to walk in under pressure and succeed. Dre does that and now you have a Tim David performing similar role, hitting sixes at will.
Mysore: Correct. You can’t teach power, but you can at least help players with the mindset as long as they have the skillset. And then help them with how do you think to work through that.Dre also is a very sensible and a very practical guy because once he agreed to join the coaching staff, he was very quick to say, listen, I’m only going to be like a sponge coming there to absorb everything. He is aware there are highly experienced guys who are in the support staff now: Abhishek [Nayar] has been with us since 2018, [Dwayne] Bravo since 2015 in TKR and mentor since last year in KKR, [Shane] Watson has been head coach in MLC and other places, also assistant coach in IPL, Tim Southee brings amazing experience as a bowling coach. So there is a wealth of experience and knowledge in our support staff. So Dre told me: “I can learn a lot from all of these guys because I’m getting my feet wet, but at the same time, I’ll have a lot to offer wherever I can.”Can Russell play in T20 leagues where Knight Riders don’t have a franchise?
Mysore: We don’t want to restrict somebody from playing or earning more money. As long as it doesn’t conflict with what we are doing he’s perfectly at liberty to play those tournaments. His contract does say he’ll play for us full-time on all the three leagues – CPL, MLC and ILT20 – and he can do other stuff which doesn’t conflict with where we play.What was the reason for overhauling the coaching staff?
Mysore: Why the reset is because we were forced to, no? Last year [after 2024 IPL] our coaching cabinet was cleaned out. [Gautam Gambhir, Abhishek Nayar, Ryan ten Doeschate, the KKR mentor and assistant coaches, took over coaching roles with Indian men’s team]. But the learning really for me is, it’s not a perfect science in terms of players who transition into coaching, and whether they can be as good as they were as players.Another learning is: the game is changing so fast that ideally you want coaches who are contemporary cricketers. That’s what we have in Abhishek Nayar, Dwayne Bravo, Shane Watson, Tim Southee and now Dre, too. Because they have just been there, done that. In fact, yesterday [December 3 match between ADKR and Warriorz] was a funny moment when Dre was bowling to Southee – my power coach is bowling to my bowling coach and my mentor [Bravo, who is ADKR head coach] is in the dugout. It was a very comical moment.So the point I am making is their touchy-feely stuff around the game will be so strong because they were, [and are still] just playing it. And secondly, what happens is, the way they can relate to the players about what the players go through. So when you’re in team meetings, strategy planning etc. the players also realise when it comes from them, these are people who have just been there, who have done it recently.Andre Russell is one of two allrounders in IPL history to achieve the double of 2000 runs and 100 wickets•BCCIGoing into the mini-auction with a purse of INR 64.3 crore – enough money to buy whoever you want – do you see KKR in a pole position to build a strong squad?
Mysore: We are never usually the ones to go into the auction with the highest purse. But it just so happened two players [Venkatesh Iyer and Russell] accounted for 41.5 crore. So that is very, very unusual that something like that happens at KKR. So now we are sort of saying, okay, let’s see. But a lot of players have withdrawn from the auction, or not put their names in, which is also interesting.You released Venkatesh Iyer after buying him for 23.5 cr last year. Post the mega-auction, you’d mentioned that you don’t buy a player and release to buy him back cheap, as that’s not how you operate. What changed?
Mysore: As I said at the start of our conversation, auctions create this, call it confusion or whatever, at times. I mean if he had scored 500 runs, he would’ve said, “hey, price tag doesn’t matter at all.” Maybe it did (grins), and it weighed (on Venkatesh). He probably had his worst year by his standards with us since 2021. The thought process that goes through the franchise think-tank at the table is, what would you rather do? And I have as much money as possible and flexibility to engineer that whichever way you want, or just go in there and be at the mercy of whatever. And so last year, in many ways, it was a bit of a learning thing for us; it was purely very, very circumstantial. I mean this is probably the first time we have done something like that: picked a big player at price, that was quite exciting. Now, because of the mini-auction dynamics rather than anything else, we decided to release him.In a recent interview, Rajasthan Royals lead owner Manoj Badale said he enjoys the challenge and unpredictability the mega-auction presents. What is your view on the mega-auction?
Mysore: We have made our position very, very clear when last year we franchises had a big discussion with IPL around retention and various other significant topics. We said you cannot be punishing franchises who have worked very, very hard to build teams to identify talent, develop them and have had success. And suddenly you are saying that’s it, let’s do a mega auction every three years.After 18-19 years of the league, this shouldn’t be happening. I’m not a fan of the viewpoint around equalising and this surprise element and all that. It doesn’t make any sense, to be honest. It doesn’t help the league, it doesn’t help the whole fan community. I mean this is the reason why the retention rule got created. In the very first auction that I attended, in 2011, there was not supposed to be any retention, but it was introduced because there were some key players that certain franchises didn’t want to release.The original plan was every three years everybody goes into the auction. Not that I disagree with that, I agree with that retention principle, but the principle of it is really that you are rewarding teams for having developed players, built that team, built that franchise, and connected with the fan base and working through it.And imagine you go win a championship and then you get dismantled after that. Or what happens is that the punishment for having good players to retain is so high that you see teams coming in with huge purses to the auction. We all had equal opportunity. And how could that be good for the league, this type of churn? So I’m not in the camp which says auctions are exciting.Venky Mysore on KKR’s coaching overhaul: “Why the reset is because we were forced to, no?”•BCCISo maximum retention for you?
Mysore: There should not be a big auction at all in my opinion. What we recommended was, if you want, you have a mini-auction every year, which means that you have rights to hold onto the player. Of course, that comes with certain questions. Immediately people will say, oh, but what about the players? You pick somebody for 50 lakhs and in that three-year cycle they’ve done exceedingly well. But I said, that will not be the reason for you to have an auction.You should create a different system for that. The system should be that everybody’s spending the same salary cap. You allow the teams to renegotiate salaries if there was going to be a situation like that where you want to reward somebody who’s coming with a 50-lakhs player who has done exceedingly well for you. I mean Venkatesh Iyer was 20 lakhs when we picked him, but he takes us to the final in 2021, almost single-handedly. So then he gets rewarded when the retention thing came in, which is great. As long as you are within the salary cap, you renegotiate your salaries internally.How would you do that?
Mysore: I would be sitting with him and saying, boss, this is what I think we can do. You go to the auction, who knows what your auction price could be? If I’m allowed to do that, and if the player doesn’t agree, then there is a release discussion. Say we got a player at 18 crore at the previous auction, but we want to now negotiate that to 12 crore for the next season. If the player says fine, we can then take the extra money and redistribute the difference with other players who have performed exceedingly well and deserve a higher fee. In theory the auction does that, but what happens there is that the franchise loses its option because somebody else is waiting with more money.You can see how some of our players from the championship year ended up with other franchises at the last mega-auction. So if I’m allowed through this system, where I can renegotiate directly, as long as I stay within my overall salary cap and the subject to the players agreeing, why not?But let’s say the player doesn’t agree. Another franchise could influence him and say you get released. You think that will not happen en masse?
Mysore: Correct, that could happen, but not en masse. And that player actually will realise that if not too many teams are releasing, there may not be big money in the mini auction, right? I mean the players feel they can get more only because there are teams releasing players and coming with lot of money, like us this year. But if this system was implemented, many of the teams will probably work in such a way based on the relationships they have with the players and what the intangibles that the franchise has to offer in terms of the environment, how they are taking care of, and the success and things like that.But the system you are suggesting needs to be transparent and equitable for players.
Mysore: These are all solvable problems. For example, an uncapped Indian player’s fee increases automatically the moment he becomes capped. So there is a system to readjust that anyway already. We just need to apply our minds and solutions can be found.Should the auction purse then be increased accordingly?
Mysore: No. I’ve always maintained this, the player fees expands to meet the salary cap. And then when you look at the highest that somebody gets, everyone is flabbergasted and say, “oh my God, 23 cr, 24 cr!” I told them, “Listen, you go back to any auction, the highest that a player gets is typically 20-25% of the salary cap. If the salary cap 125 crore, they’re getting 25 crore. So don’t be surprised because it’s just the dynamics of competition.” People are all sitting on money and will be raising the paddle based on how much money they have left in their kitty. So raising salary cap is not changing anything. It is just increasing or inflating the player fees and skewing the upper end. So that’s not something that we would advocate at all.But the player will say ‘I am a key stakeholder, too. The IPL and franchises are profiting due to my performance.’ So why should the player not command a good price?
Mysore: Yeah, fair enough. The counter to that is to say, let’s pay for performance then. Let’s make the fixed fee a very low fee and have a performance incentive built in there so a player can say, “Listen, I’m performing and therefore I should get paid.” Fair enough. But by the same token, somebody right now is getting a high fee but the performance is well below par, it’s not like we are cutting the fees, we’re not. So it’s still at a nascent stage in that sense. But the idea is you shouldn’t kill the goose that’s laying the golden egg. Franchise sports has existed around the world for decades. So they’ve all done circles around this subject and come back with plans and ideas on how everything can be structured. So we can borrow a lot of these things so we don’t have to reinvent the wheel.

Will Ashwin be the most expensive buy at inaugural ILT20 auction?

Squads, purses, players in the fray… eveything you need to know about the first ILT20 auction

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Sep-2025There have been capped Indian cricketers at the UAE’s ILT20 league in the past – like Robin Uthappa, Ambati Rayudu and Yusuf Pathan – but not many and not any as high-profile or as recently retired as R Ashwin. On Wednesday, Ashwin will be in the fray at the ILT20’s inaugural player auction where he has listed the maximum base price of US$120,000. Ashwin, though, isn’t the only talking point ahead of the auction.

Ashwin first – how come, what’s the deal?

He retired from international cricket during the 2024-25 tour of Australia, and then from the IPL in August this year. At the time, he said, “My time as an explorer of the game around various leagues begins today”. He has been doing some of that, and last week became the first capped India cricketer to earn a BBL deal, with Sydney Thunder.Now, Ashwin is in the ILT20 auction, and he has entered it with the highest base price – the only player at the auction with a base price in six figures. At a tournament where teams have names like (Dubai) Capitals, (Abu Dhabi) Knight Riders and MI (Emirates), he should be in demand. Especially because he has committed to the entire ILT20, and will go to the BBL only after it’s over.

Is he the only Indian in the mix at the auction?

No. There were 24 Indians in the longlist, and in the shortlist, there are five.Apart from Ashwin, another prominent capped player who has officially retired quite recently, though he had been out of the frame for a while, is Piyush Chawla. Chawla, with 192 wickets, is still the fourth-highest wicket-taker in IPL history. Ashwin is actually fifth on that list, with 187. And like Ashwin, Chawla should find a team too, especially at a base price of US$40,000.The others are Priyank Panchal, Ankit Rajpoot and Siddarth Kaul, all at a base price of US$10,000.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

I don’t recall ESPNcricinfo talking about the ILT20 auction before. Why now?

Oh, there hasn’t been one in the past. Only drafts in the first three seasons. This time, there will be an IPL-like auction. Therefore, this. What’s also new is that the ILT20 in 2025-26 will happen in the December-January window, unlike the usual January-February window to avoid the crammed period at the start of the year. In fact, in 2026, the men’s T20 World Cup is also expected to start in early February, so it’s more cluttered than usual.

What about auction purse?

The franchises had announced their retentions and direct signings in July. Each team could spend up to US$1.2 million on those, with the balance amount to be added to the auction purse of US$800,000. While a franchise can exhaust its entire US$2 million purse, it will need to spend a minimum of US$1.5 million. The ILT20 rules also permit franchises to spend an additional US$250,000 to buy up to two wildcard players outside the auction.Here’s how much each franchise has left:Abu Dhabi Knight Riders: US$825,000
Desert Vipers: US$802,500
Dubai Capitals: US$10,35,000
Gulf Giants: US$10,35,000
MI Emirates: US$800,000
Sharjah Warriorz: US$800,000

Apart from Ashwin, who are the others at the auction with high base prices?

After Ashwin’s base price, the highest slab is US$80,000, and there are 20 players at that price: Evin Lewis, Tymal Mills, Jason Roy, Karim Janat, Naveen-ul-Haq, Obed McCoy, Taskin Ahmed, Andre Fletcher, Liam Dawson, Mohammad Nabi, Jayden Seales, Shamar Joseph, Craig Overton, and seven Pakistan players – Fakhar, Saim Ayub, Imad Wasim, Mohammad Nawaz, Naseem Shah, Abdul Samad and Faheem Ashraf.The lower slabs are of US$40,000 and US$10,000, which is the lowest base price.

That should be fun. So there are the usual player retentions and everything else?

Of course. And pre-auction signings. Here’s the full list:Retained players
Abu Dhabi Knight Riders: Alishan Sharafu, Andre Russell, Charith Asalanka, Phil Salt and Sunil Narine
Desert Vipers: Dan Lawrence, David Payne, Khuzaima Bin Tanveer, Lockie Ferguson, Max Holden, Sam Curran and Wanindu Hasaranga
Dubai Capitals: Dasun Shanaka, Dushmantha Chameera, Gulbadin Naib, Rovman Powell and Shai Hope
Gulf Giants: Aayan Afzal Khan, Blessing Muzarabani, Gerhard Erasmus, James Vince and Mark Adair
MI Emirates: AM Ghazanfar, Fazalhaq Farooqi, Kusal Perera, Romario Shepherd, Tom Banton and Muhammad Waseem
Sharjah Warriorz: Johnson Charles, Tim Southee and Tom Kohler-CadmoreNew signings
Abu Dhabi Knight Riders: Alex Hales, Liam Livingstone, Sherfane Rutherford
Desert Vipers: Andries Gous
Dubai Capitals: Luke Wood, Waqar Salamkheil and Muhammad Jawadullah
Gulf Giants: Azmatullah Omarzai, Moeen Ali, Rahmanullah Gurbaz
MI Emirates: Chris Woakes, Kamindu Mendis
Sharjah Warriorz: Maheesh Theekshana, Sikandar Raza, Saurabh Netravalkar, Tim David* On Tuesday, the day before the auction, Dinesh Karthik was picked as Kusal Mendis’ replacement at Sharjah Warriorz.ESPNcricinfo LtdRemember, each franchise needs a minimum of 19 players and a maximum of 21, excluding the two wildcards they are allowed to buy outside the auction. The franchises will also have one right-to-match card but they can use it only to buy back a UAE player. That player must have been part of the franchise’s development squad or the 2025 squad.All that being said, the line-ups as they are could go through some tweaks, because despite the change in the playing dates, there will be a clash with the Lanka Premier League and the Bangladesh Premier League.

Wildcards?!

Yeah, all teams are allowed two wildcards. And all teams bar MI Emirates have signed their wildcards. By the way, a franchise can sign a player as wildcard anytime. Following is the list of players who’ve already been picked as wildcards:Abu Dhabi Knight Riders: Jason Holder and Usman Tariq
Desert Vipers: Shimron Hetmyer
Dubai Capitals: David Willey and Leus de Plooy
Gulf Giants: Kyle Mayers and Matthew Forde
Sharjah Warriorz: Tom Abell and Adil RashidSo Vipers can get one more if they want, and MI Emirates can get their two at a later stage.

But I don’t see any Pakistanis anywhere. What’s up with that?

Well, the first thing you need to do is read this by Osman Samiuddin. And no, there is no official ban on them, in case you were wondering.Also, there are 16 players from Pakistan, including many from the squad at the Asia Cup recently, who are in the auction shortlist: apart from Fakhar, Ayub, Mohammad Haris, Imad, Naseem, Samad and Faheem mentioned above, there are Mohammad Nawaz, Hasan Nawaz, Hussain Talat, Mohammad Wasim, Mohammad Hasnain, Salman Irshad, Sufiyan Muqeem, Usama Mir and Zaman Khan. You’d expect many of them to be in demand, unless there are non-cricketing factors at play.

And how will the auction play out? When do the big names come up for bidding?

The shortlist has 196 players who will fill the remaining slots. A minimum of 11 players will have to be bought by each team, so that’s at least 66 players who will find new teams on Wednesday. It will start with the players in Set 1, 2 and 3, who are all local UAE players, including familiar names like Rohan Mustafa, Ethan D’Souza, Vriitya Aravind and Junaid Siddique, among others.This will be followed by nine sets of players from Full-Member countries, and this includes the big stars: Ashwin, of course, as well as all the players in the US$80,000 base price category, and some even in the US$40,000 and US$10,000 slabs.Next come three sets of players from the Associate countries, numbering 23. Some familiar names are there too, like Namibia’s David Wiese, Netherlands’ Roelof van der Merwe, USA’s Aaron Jones and Unmukt Chand, and Nepal’s Dipendra Singh Airee.After that are the uncapped players from UAE, and players from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and finally the accelerated round, which is by no means a selection of unfamiliar names. You will find the likes of Ravi Bopara, Lorcan Tucker, Benny Howell, Curtis Campher, Blair Tickner, Gudakesh Motie, Keacy Carty, Bas de Leede and many others there.

That’s a lot to look forward to. What else? When does it start, what are the other details to make a note of?

The tournament starts on December 2 this year, and runs till January 4, 2026. So far, it has been an all-teams-play-each-other-twice in the first round, followed by four playoffs, totalling 34 games, and there’s no indication that will change.

Chelsea star criticised vs Wolves after having fewer touches than Sanchez

One Chelsea star has been critiqued for his performance in their game against Wolverhampton Wanderers, with Robert Sanchez having more touches than him at Stamford Bridge.

In what was Chelsea’s final Premier League game ahead of the November international break, the Blues played host to a Wolves side who, after 10 games, were still without a win in the top flight.

Enzo Maresca’s side struggled to do much with the chances they generated in the first half against Wolves, frustrating the home support at Stamford Bridge. Soon after the half-time break, however, the Blues broke the deadlock.

Malo Gusto opened the scoring with what was his first-ever senior goal just minutes into the second half. This lead was doubled just after the hour mark when Joao Pedro smashed a deflected Estevao cross beyond Wolves goalkeeper Sam Johnstone.

The game was put beyond any doubt when, with less than 20 minutes to go, Pedro Neto scored against his former club. The win moved Chelsea to second in the table. However, one Blues player was slammed for his performance against the relegation-threatened side.

Delap failed to make mark against Wolves

Signed in the summer from Ipswich Town, Liam Delap has endured a tough start to life at Chelsea. An injury saw him sidelined for weeks to open the 2025/26 campaign, missing almost two months. Upon his return, against Wolves in the Carabao Cup, Delap was sent off for accumulating two yellow cards after coming off the bench.

Delap, who reportedly signed a contract worth £100,000 per week, made his first start for Chelsea since returning from injury against the Old Gold, but failed to make an impact. Simon Johnson, who works for The Athletic, was critical of what the striker produced, noting that he did not appear at match fitness and said he was “struggling”.

As per SofaScore, within 64 minutes of football, Delap had just one shot on target. He was dispossessed on three occasions and by having just 15 touches in the game, had less time on the ball than Sanchez.

Delap is still a young player, one coming back from a relatively long set-back no less. His performance against Wolves, though, can simply not be the level that he consistently operates at going forward.

Chelsea weighing up move for England international

Costa Rica fall to Haiti as Keylor Navas and Miguel Herrera edge toward missing the World Cup

Costa Rica’s World Cup hopes have taken a severe hit. A 1–0 loss to Haiti has left Miguel Herrera’s side on the brink in the CONCACAF qualifiers, with their direct path now hanging by a thread. Pressure around Herrera grew louder after the match as Los Ticos have a difficult path to next year's tournament.

  • AFP

    Costa Rica drop to third in Group C

    Herrera’s team entered the match with a chance to seize control of the group, especially after Nicaragua stunned Honduras earlier in the day. Instead, slipped to third place, and their fate now depends on a combination of unlikely results.

    Haiti struck the decisive blow just before halftime. Josué Casimir slipped a pass into the box for Ruben Providence, whose low cross found Frantzdy Pierrot for the opener. Keylor Navas immediately expressed his frustration, shouting toward a back line that reacted far too slowly. Despite pushing forward in the second half, Costa Rica never found the equalizer.

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  • AFP

    Los Ticos must beat Honduras

    The math is now unforgiving for Herrera. Costa Rica must defeat Honduras in San José next week and hope Haiti fail to beat Nicaragua. Anything less than a victory eliminates them entirely from direct qualification and could even shut the door on the playoff route.

  • AFP

    Herrera faces growing pressure

    Pressure around Herrera grew louder after the match, including a tense exchange during his arrival to the postgame press conference. Asked whether he still believed he should lead the team for the decisive match, he didn’t hesitate.
    “It’s not my decision. If we don’t qualify, then we’ll have to consider what comes next. I’m committed to this project.”

    Herrera took full responsibility for the team’s poor return – one win, one loss, and three draws in the final round – but emphasized that decisions about his future lie with federation president Osael Maroto.

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  • AFP

    Navas and Costa Rica now need a miracle

    Costa Rica will now carry their fading World Cup hopes into a must-win showdown against Honduras – the group leader, but one that also arrives under significant pressure after a 2–0 defeat on the road to Nicaragua.

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