Cummins makes history at IPL auction

By Reuters / Wire

Australia’s Pat Cummins has been bought by Kolkata Knight Riders for $A3.1 million becoming the most expensive overseas player in the IPL history.

The 26-year-old, ranked No.1 in Tests, attracted an intense bidding war between the Virat Kohli-led Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) and the Delhi Capitals on Thursday before Kolkata joined in to bag his services for the 2020 edition of the tournament.

Cummins was part of the Kolkata squad in 2014 and 2015 and last played in the tournament for Delhi in 2017. The Mumbai Indians picked him up the following season but he was ruled out with a back injury.

England all-rounder Ben Stokes was the most expensive overseas buy before Cummins when Pune paid 145 million rupees in 2017 while Yuvraj Singh, the hero of India’s 2011 World Cup triumph, got the highest bid for a home-based player of 160 million in 2015 from Delhi.

A total of 62 players were sold at the auction for the 13th edition with the eight franchises spending a total of 1.403 billion rupees.

There was a hefty payday for more Australians with Glenn Maxwell going to Kings XI Punjab for 107.5 million rupees and reigning champions Mumbai paying 80 million rupees for paceman Nathan Coulter-Nile.

Maxwell recently returned to Twenty20 cricket after taking six weeks off from the game to deal with mental health issues and was left out of the Australia squad for next month’s limited-overs tour of India.

Australia’s one-day captain Aaron Finch joined Bangalore for 44 million rupees while England World Cup-winning skipper Eoin Morgan returned to his old side Kolkata for 52.5 million.

South African fast bowler Dale Steyn twice went unsold before his former team Bangalore picked him up in the last leg at his listed price of 20 million.

Former India leg-spinner Piyush Chawla was the top buy among home-based players, going to MS Dhoni-led Chennai Super Kings for 67.5 million, while Kolkata signed 48-year-old leggie Pravin Tambe, the oldest player in the auction.

The Crowd Says:

2019-12-20T01:01:19+00:00

Tanmoy Kar

Guest


Australians are the most favoured players in the IPL in general,, though the price of Cummins is astronomical.

2019-12-20T00:11:36+00:00

dat

Roar Rookie


RCB and Delhi got into a mindless bidding war, which jacked up his price tag. RCb are historically weak when it comes to their bowling, so they wanted one quality international quick at all cost. Delhi probably fancied their chances to win for the 1st time if they could partner cummins with rabada and so were equally enthusiastic . In the end Kolkata got him cause despite their depth on paper when it comes to those who can clock close to 90 miles an hr(lockie, 2 india u19 quicks,Russell when motivated) all of them are injury prone and last season it hampered their chances alot, as they usually have a smaller squad in comparison to other teams. No other team really looked interested in him, so i would think balance of the squad was one of the key factors as well.

2019-12-19T23:15:29+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


That's bizarre. Cummins is clearly a brilliant bowler in tests, and a very good one in ODIs. But he's not a T20 superstar. In 77 T20s he's taken 1.2 wickets per game at an economy of 7.7rpo. His T20I record is better (1.3 wickets per game at 6.8rpo) but in his two T20Is in India this year he took two wickets and went at 8.4rpo. He's also not a natural hitter with the bat. I suspect that his record price has as much to do with his promotional potential as his T20 talents.

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