February 1, 1993
ICL AUCTIONS
Viv Richards (ODI Avg - 47, SR - 90.20)
Even before the auction started it seemed like an inevitable thing that Lloyd would push for Bangalore to sign his former teammate who loved hitting any attack out of the ground. And that is what transpired. No matter the rising bids from Madras and Calcutta, Lloyd wanted his man and he ensured that Bangalore would get him at 90 lakhs.
David Gower (ODI Avg - 30.77, SR - 75.15)
Another star of the last decade, Calcutta wanted a cheap deal but Bombay's persistence paid off as they got him for 10 lakhs.
David Boon (ODI Avg - 35.77, SR - 66.05, ICC Ranking - 7)
It was quite surprising to see the current international go for 14 lakhs to Delhi with only competition from Bangalore. It is an absolute bargain for a team that previously spent a lot of money on Kapil Dev to sign a quality international batsman at a relatively lower price.
Andrew Jones (ODI Avg - 41.70, SR - 60.15, ICC Ranking - 13)
Despite having a solid ODI record and having some interested looks from team groups, no one in the end bid for the Kiwi batsman. Is this a sign of teams starting to value aggression more than before in this new format?
Allan Lamb (ODI Avg - 39.31, SR - 75.54)
Madras were willing to sign the retired Englishman for 15 lakhs despite his county commitments, hoping that his aggression in the middle order works out as long as he stays with them.
Robin Smith (ODI Avg - 39.14, SR - 69.48, ICC Ranking - 4)
Delhi and Tollywood had a duel for this prolific batsman that would end with Tollywood buying him for 30 lakhs.
Martin Crowe (ODI Avg - 38.33, SR - 72.44, ICC Ranking - 2)
For perhaps the most talented New Zealand batsman we have ever seen and having lost out on Lamb and Smith, Delhi were free to bid aggressively to get him at 50 lakhs after Bombay and Madras were both reticent to go beyond that. For the top scorer of the 92 WC, that doesn't sound like much.
Geoff Marsh (ODI Avg - 39.97, SR - 55.93)
After scorning Jones previously it was a surprise that teams were willing to bid on Marsh and Bombay managed to get him in the end for 18 lakhs.
Dean Jones (ODI Avg - 46.38, SR - 72.97, ICC Ranking - 1)
Despite him being very likely to miss out on the second half of the tournament, three teams were very heavily interested in him. Bombay wanted another big name batsman to share the burden with Tendulkar, Calcutta wanted a number three to finish their middle order set and Madras wanted him because their crowd would have no doubt witnessed his finest hour in the Australian team live. What followed was the perfect storm of three teams going all out to try and sign the definitive limited overs batsman active internationally with a set of crazy bidding action that would only be paused temporarily when Madras pulled out at 95 lakhs. Seemingly not content though the remaining two would continue back and forth until Bombay chose to withdraw when Calcutta made their final bid of 1.2 crores. Without any doubt it is unlikely that anyone else will be more expensive in the rest of the auction and that should ensure Dean Jones's legacy as the highest paid player in the first ICL season.
Even before the auction started it seemed like an inevitable thing that Lloyd would push for Bangalore to sign his former teammate who loved hitting any attack out of the ground. And that is what transpired. No matter the rising bids from Madras and Calcutta, Lloyd wanted his man and he ensured that Bangalore would get him at 90 lakhs.
David Gower (ODI Avg - 30.77, SR - 75.15)
Another star of the last decade, Calcutta wanted a cheap deal but Bombay's persistence paid off as they got him for 10 lakhs.
David Boon (ODI Avg - 35.77, SR - 66.05, ICC Ranking - 7)
It was quite surprising to see the current international go for 14 lakhs to Delhi with only competition from Bangalore. It is an absolute bargain for a team that previously spent a lot of money on Kapil Dev to sign a quality international batsman at a relatively lower price.
Andrew Jones (ODI Avg - 41.70, SR - 60.15, ICC Ranking - 13)
Despite having a solid ODI record and having some interested looks from team groups, no one in the end bid for the Kiwi batsman. Is this a sign of teams starting to value aggression more than before in this new format?
Allan Lamb (ODI Avg - 39.31, SR - 75.54)
Madras were willing to sign the retired Englishman for 15 lakhs despite his county commitments, hoping that his aggression in the middle order works out as long as he stays with them.
Robin Smith (ODI Avg - 39.14, SR - 69.48, ICC Ranking - 4)
Delhi and Tollywood had a duel for this prolific batsman that would end with Tollywood buying him for 30 lakhs.
Martin Crowe (ODI Avg - 38.33, SR - 72.44, ICC Ranking - 2)
For perhaps the most talented New Zealand batsman we have ever seen and having lost out on Lamb and Smith, Delhi were free to bid aggressively to get him at 50 lakhs after Bombay and Madras were both reticent to go beyond that. For the top scorer of the 92 WC, that doesn't sound like much.
Geoff Marsh (ODI Avg - 39.97, SR - 55.93)
After scorning Jones previously it was a surprise that teams were willing to bid on Marsh and Bombay managed to get him in the end for 18 lakhs.
Dean Jones (ODI Avg - 46.38, SR - 72.97, ICC Ranking - 1)
Despite him being very likely to miss out on the second half of the tournament, three teams were very heavily interested in him. Bombay wanted another big name batsman to share the burden with Tendulkar, Calcutta wanted a number three to finish their middle order set and Madras wanted him because their crowd would have no doubt witnessed his finest hour in the Australian team live. What followed was the perfect storm of three teams going all out to try and sign the definitive limited overs batsman active internationally with a set of crazy bidding action that would only be paused temporarily when Madras pulled out at 95 lakhs. Seemingly not content though the remaining two would continue back and forth until Bombay chose to withdraw when Calcutta made their final bid of 1.2 crores. Without any doubt it is unlikely that anyone else will be more expensive in the rest of the auction and that should ensure Dean Jones's legacy as the highest paid player in the first ICL season.
(The third crorepati of the day)