The Asian Age

Unadkat the most expensive Indian at 11.5cr; Lamichhane ` first Nepalese player in IPL

UNADKAT BECOMES MOST EXPENSIVE INDIAN OF IPL- 11 AUCTIONS WITH BID OF ` 11.5 CRORE. GAYLE GETS LIFELINE FROM KINGS XI AT THE END.

- UTKARSH KRISHAN

With the eight franchises scrambling to find the right balance in their squads, Jaydev Unadkat emerged as the star offering after Rajasthan Royals splurged ` 11.5 crore on left- arm seamer on the concluding day of the IPL auctions here on Sunday.

The Unadkat factor is starkly obvious and quite intriguing, which left teams circling in a bidding frenzy. Unadkat was second only to Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar for the purple cap with a 24- wicket haul in IPL 2017 and had a stupendous year with finalists Rising Pune Supergiant.

The 26- year- old’s pace, verve and ability to swing the ball in the death overs makes him a laudable asset in a format that yearns for incisivene­ss — both at the start of a game and towards the end.

Starting at a base price of ` 1.5 crore, the Saurashtra man was initially courted by Chennai Super Kings and Kings XI Punjab, who were both desperatel­y looking for an Indian spearhead, outbid one another to the ` 11- crore mark. After Stephen Fleming felt he could stretch his budget no more, Preity Zinta- led KXIP looked odds- on to win the contest, only for Rajasthan Royals to swoop in with an ` 11.5 crore bid in the eleventh hour. Thus, the 26year- old with a bevy of stats in his favour — 56 wickets in 47 IPL games and the only Indian to bag two five- wicket hauls — became the most expensive Indian of the IPL- 11 auctions.

GAYLE THIRD TIME LUCKY

Kings XI Punjab did manage to sign Australian speedster Andrew Tye for ` 7.2 crore, becoming the only other millionair­e on Day 2. But the real headline of the day was Zinta offering Chris Gayle a new lease of life in the IPL — at the third time of asking. Gayle, who has terrorised bowling attacks for the better part of a decade in the IPL, was passed over on the first day of the auctions. The West Indian was to go under the hammer on Day 2, but failed to garner interest again. Towards the end, Kings XI snapped him up for his base price of ` 2 crore as the auction reverberat­ed with a round of applause.

Other high- profile players who were offered another chance were India opener M. Vijay (` 2 crore to CSK), wicketkeep­er Parthiv Patel (` 1.7 crore to RCB), and pacer Mitchell Johnson (` 2 crore to KKR)

ASSOCIATE POWER

Players from two associate nations — namely Afghanista­n and Nepal — received tremendous attention. Experience­d allrounder Mohammad Nabi was sold to Sunrisers for ` 1 crore while U- 19 spin duo Mujeeb Zadran (` 4 crore to KXIP) and Zahir Khan (` 60 lakh to RR) took the Afghan tally to four players. The auction proved novel in Delhi Daredevils’ signing of Nepalese bowler Sandeep Lamichhane ( 20 lakh) becoming the first player from his country to feature in the IPL.

THE EXCLUSIONS

Titans from previous seasons such the sling- action speed demon Lasith Malinga found no takers. Even on Sunday, when teams could recall players for bidding, Australian and former Kings XI Punjab stalwart Shaun Marsh, exMumbai man Lendl Simmons, ace SA pacer Dale Steyn were left out. Even Englishman Alex Hales, who is ranked 8th in the T20 batsmen rankings, failed to generate interest.

KARNATAKA’S LATEST BIG- MONEY EXPORT

Karnataka all- rounder Gowtham Krishnappa earned himself a massive payday as Rajasthan Royals shelled out a whopping ` 6.20 crore for him. Given that his base price was ` 20 lakh, the 29- year- old was picked up for 31 times that value. Last season, Mumbai Indians bought Gowtham for ` 2 crore. However, he did not get to play as the team captured their third IPL crown. Most recently, Gowtham took six wickets to overpower Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy quarterfin­al.

‘ It was surreal’ After the physio told me that my bidding is on, I was hooked on to the live streaming for the next 15 minutes and found it surreal. The entire team stopped it’s training to watch my bidding. Honestly, I did not have any amount in mind. — Jaydev Unadkat

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