In the IPL, with a cap on the number of overseas players and the paucity of Indian options in certain roles — notably that of the seam-bowling all-rounder and the fast bowler — it is only natural that certain cricketers should ATTRACT BIGGER BIDS than others. The 2017 auction was not a major one in relative terms: squads had only 77 slots remaining and the eight franchises had a total of Rs. 148.33 crore to spend. Teams had gaps to plug and arrived with specific players in mind.
It was clear, at the end of the first IPL auction in 2008, that those responsible for the event were delighted with their idea. “It is amazing drama,” I. S. Bindra, then a member of the tournament’s governing council, gushed afterwards. “The market is determining the price. That’s how a free market economy should flow.”
This free-market economy, with prices dictated by demand and supply, had valued David Hussey, a man who had played only one game of international cricket, higher than Ricky Ponting, who at that stage had 34 Test and 25 ODI hundreds to his name. Manoj Tiwary, who had made his ODI debut for India a fortnight before the auction, earned a greater sum than Anil Kumble.
Such comparisons, though, are not entirely fair, and it mattered that Hussey, a powerful striker of the ball, was seen as more suited to T20 cricket than Ponting, and that Kumble was closer to the end of his career than the beginning.
IN 2008, IPL franchise-owners and coaching staff were still coming to grips with the format and its demands, but it was clear that reputations counted for little. Teams had their ideas of what constituted a successful T20 unit and this they pursued. Over time, a template has emerged of the various roles in T20 cricket: the unfettered opener, the all-rounder at No. 6 who can clobber a 15-ball-40, the specialist death-overs bowler who can send down cutters and yorkers, the spinner who is difficult to pick, and the genuine fast-bowler.
In the IPL, with a cap on the number of overseas players and the paucity of Indian options in certain roles — notably that of the seam-bowling all-rounder and the fast bowler — it is only natural that certain cricketers should attract bigger bids than others.
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