The 18th of February saw another incredibly exciting IPL auction take place.
With record purchases and even some big names going unsold, here is a breakdown of every Australian who will be involved in the 2021 Indian Premier League, including those who were auctioned off.
New signings
Glenn Maxwell, Dan Christian, Daniel Sams
Retained players
Josh Phillipe, Adam Zampa, Kane Richardson
The auction could not have gone much better for the Aussie-heavy RCB. They replaced Chris Morris with highly-rated Kiwi Kyle Jamieson for nearly $3 million AUD. They followed this up by splashing around 2.5 million on Glenn Maxwell. Maxwell endured a horrid 2020 IPL with the Punjab Kings but will provide incredible firepower to a batting line-up that already consists of Virat Kohli, AB De Villiers and Josh Phillipe.
The same goes for fellow all-rounders Dan Christian and Daniel Sams. Despite being 37, Christian hit unbelievable form with the Big Bash champion Sydney Sixers and will give Bangalore a power hitter and a reliable bowler. Sams was not auctioned, but traded to the team from Delhi. He will be a more reliable option with the ball than Christian, and also be a death overpower hitter if needed.
RCB retained Phillipe, Richardson, and most importantly, Zampa. With the tournament most likely being held on turn-heavy Indian pitches, Zampa’s crafty leg-spin will prove valuable. It also makes Phillipe look more appealing as an incredible player of spin. Richardson may not get the most playing time, but when called upon will be a handy pacer to have.
New signings
Jhye Richardson, Riley Meredith, Moises Henriques
After releasing a host of players following IPL 2020, including Glenn Maxwell, the newly-named Punjab Kings came into the auction with over $9 million to spend, the most of any club. They used this money to address their need for a fast bowler to partner Mohamed Shami.
The Big Bash’s leading wicket-taker Jhye Richardson was purchased for just over $2.4 million and is expected to lead the line. The second fast bowler they opted for was fellow young gun Riley Meredith for around $1.4 million. It was a price tag that surprised many, but such pace at a young age means Meredith could be a key part of the bowling line-up.
After stealing the world’s number one T20 batsman Dawid Malan and all-rounder Fabian Allen for their base prices, they continued their haul of Australian talent by spending a hair under $750,000 on Moises Henriques. The Sydney Sixers star will be hugely important to the side as a power hitter and part-time bowler.
New signing
Steve Smith
Retained player
Marcus Stoinis
One of the biggest shocks of the auction was Steve Smith going for a measly $400,000, just a hair over his base price. The fit here is extremely interesting, as Delhi already have an extremely strong batting line-up with Shikhar Dhawan, Rishabh Pant, Shreyas Iyer, Shimron Hetmyer and Marcus Stoinis. As absurd as it sounds, the maximum of four imports in a starting XI may relegate Smith to the bench to start the season.
Stoinis is one of the cornerstones for the Capitals, even picking up man of the match in their semi-final victory in 2020. He did not feature much with the ball in the Big Bash, but will do so to add variety to a loaded Capitals pace attack.
New signing
Nathan Coulter-Nile
Retained player
Chris Lynn
The defending champions did not have much they needed to address other than a fast bowler to replace the outgoing James Pattinson. They did so with Sydney Thunder quick Adam Milne. They then paid nearly $900,000 for Nathan Coulter-Nile, a player they had last year but decided to let back on to the market. Coulter-Nile will probably now serve as Milne’s backup.
It is a similar situation for Chris Lynn, who looks set for another year of riding the bench as Quinton De Kock is favoured.
New signing
Ben Cutting
Retained player
Pat Cummins
The Knight Riders quietly enjoyed a brilliant auction, highlighted by snagging star all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan on the cheap. Ben Cutting for $100,000 will serve as a handy backup to Andre Russell and will not play too many games. The former record IPL purchase for an import, Pat Cummins, will continue to spearhead the bowling line-up alongside Kiwi Lockie Ferguson.
Retained player
Josh Hazlewood
The Super Kings came into the auction with seven out of their eight import slots already filled and just needed to find a replacement for retired Aussie Shane Watson. They attempted to get Maxwell, but were outbid by Bangalore and had to settle for English spinner Moeen Ali instead. The Englishman will star in a bowling line-up alongside Josh Hazlewood, who is fresh off of a brilliant summer with the ball against India.
Retained players
David Warner, Mitchell Marsh
David Warner has been one of the most successful imports in IPL history, and this year will continue to spearhead a Sunrisers side that reached last year’s semi-finals. The team retained most of their core from IPL 2020, adding just Afghan and Brisbane Heat Spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman to the list of imports. Surprisingly, they opted to retain Mitchell Marsh. Marsh is unlikely to find a place in the best XI unless his bowling picks up, as Jason Holder is currently the starting all-rounder for the side.
The only other way to get in the team would be to beat both Kane Williamson and Jonny Bairstow to a batting role, which seems extremely unlikely.
Retained player
Andrew Tye
The Royals endured an extremely busy auction, as they attempted to build a squad post the Steve Smith era. They splashed the cash on South African all-rounder Chris Morris, making him the IPL’s record purchase.
They also added Perth Scorchers opener Liam Livingston to serve as a backup batsman. Andrew Tye looks set for another year of backing up Jofra Archer in the side. However, he may get an opportunity to play consistently if Archer opts to leave the tournament early for Test duty.
Such is the depth of international players in the IPL that a number of marquee names went unsold. None were bigger nor more surprising than Aaron Finch. Though he endured a horrid Big Bash, it was thought that name and reputation alone would see him land on a team.
The same goes for Marnus Labuschagne and Shaun Marsh.
Another major surprise was Alex Hales. The English opener was in sensational form for the Sydney Thunder. However, his high base price may have been the reason he was snubbed. The Big Bash form of fast bowlers Jason Behrendorff, Ben Dwarshius, Billy Stanlake and Sean Abbott did not attract any interest.
Finally, Hobart Hurricanes duo Mathew Wade and Ben McDermott were also overlooked, the latter rather surprisingly due to his skill at just 26 years of age.
Brainstrust
Roar Rookie
An average of 3 more and 1 more on strike rate is still significant. Kohli has got an even better record when you exclude his early seasons, being a local he got an early start before he was fully developed. The real reason Kohli gets the massive money in the IPL though is his performances for India in T20 internationals where he averages 50 at about 140. Gayle is the reverse a great performer in the IPL where its more important financially to him, and has about the same record for the West Indies as Kohli does in the IPL.
Ben Palliyaguru
Roar Rookie
I think the fact that his base price was so high meant teams were hesitant to buy
DingoGray
Roar Guru
No real surprises here. Well other than Finchy. While in terrible form, his historical results should of ensured another contract- just at a vastly slashed price tag.
Don Freo
Roar Rookie
That's right. If you are going to bat slowly, you need to score average closer to 40 than 35. Kohli is not an outstanding T20 batsman either. He is just an outstanding batsman who, like Smith, is blunted by T20 requirements but does OK.
Don Freo
Roar Rookie
I don't think Smith is a "lock" for the World Cup at all. NCN's career has been nobbled by injury and Aussie selection has left him out of the frame, in the same way Dan Christian and Fawed Ahmed are no longer considered. Smith should be performing better at this stage of his career if these older players still can.
Ben Palliyaguru
Roar Rookie
I mean for perspective Virat Kohli has the exact same strike rate as Smith in the IPL and an average of just 3 runs more.
Paul
Roar Guru
Your comment makes a lot of sense but I'd reckon Delhi would be thrilled to pick up Smith for a song.
Paul
Roar Guru
yet one bloke named Smith is a lock to play in the T20 World Cup and the other isn't. I guess that's why the bloke who isn't is worth 500k more
Targa
Roar Rookie
It is interesting who makes it and who doesn't. Here in NZ the big news is the crazy money that Kyle Jamieson got and the fact that Devon Conway and Glen Phillips both surprisingly missed out
Don Freo
Roar Rookie
He may be valuable but an average of 35 and at a pretty moderate strike rate...that's not worth $400K. He is a $200K IPL player...at best.
Ben Palliyaguru
Roar Rookie
He's gonna have a hard time getting consistent game time.
Ben Palliyaguru
Roar Rookie
Hi John and thank you. The start date is estimated for the 11th of April, but players would probably have to arrive at least 6 days prior due to quarantine restrictions. So yes unfortunately, this will affect shield cricket
Ben Palliyaguru
Roar Rookie
A common trend you will see in these IPL auctions is the value of all rounders. The three most expensive players from the auction yesterday were Chris Morris, Kyle Jamieson, and Glenn Maxwell, all all rounders. Coulter-Nile is therefore pretty valuable. In addition to that, many of the teams batting top orders were already full, so Dehli only needed one bid to get Smith.
Ben Palliyaguru
Roar Rookie
i'd say thats pretty harsh on Smith to be honest. He has a pretty decent IPL average of 35 for his career, so is certainty valuable.
Woof
Roar Rookie
A bit off topic, well, a lot, but what would T20 look like if every team had 22 players, of which only eleven could take the field - but the decision on which eleven made during the match?
Peter
Roar Rookie
Poor Smudge. He'll have to apply for Job Keeper.
Paul
Roar Guru
you'd think at least 3 weeks early' two weeks of quarantine and another week for practice? I reckon I could put up with that if I was getting even 400,000 for a few weeks work.
Tony
Roar Guru
Thanks for the very informative article Ben
Don Freo
Roar Rookie
NCN performs successfully in IPL. He takes key wickets, bowls very economically, is a dynamic fielder and hammers big runs at the end of an innings. Smith is the best Test batsman in the world but, as a T20 player, he is very lucky to be getting picked up, let alone ripping out $400K.
JOHN ALLAN
Guest
Good morning Paul. Thanks for the info. In this crazy world of isolation & quarantine, they may have to arrive well in advance of that date.