Well first of all I'd like to thank you all for taking part in a very interesting draft, and for facing up to the challenge of picking teams that were very difficult to balance. I would also like to thank almost everyone for not turning it into an argument about race, which was the thing that made me most nervous about this draft concept.
@ahmedleo414
Bruce Mitchell
Eric Rowan
Jonathan Vandiar 
Ashwell Prince 
Khaya Zondo 
Andy Flower
Haroon Lorgat

Shaun Pollock
Dale Steyn
Imran Tahir 
Mfuneko Ngam 

Shaun Pollock and Dale Steyn is a fantastic new ball pairing; good luck hypothetical batsmen when it comes to so much as getting one off the square.

A few of your POCs would be excellent left-field picks in a normal draft, particularly Haroon Lorgat.

Your middle-order looks very weak with Vandiar and Zondo up in the top five. Flower batting at three would make that far less of a problem, but alas he isn't.
@Aislabie
Yacoob Omar 
Eddie Barlow
Jacques Kallis
Keegan Petersen 
Denis Lindsay
Tony Greig
Mike Procter
Saait Magiet 
Omar Henry 
Vincent Barnes

Monde Zondeki 

The first strength has to be the obvious one - six all-rounders in the top nine batsmen offers us almost limitless flexibility. Not that we exactly need it, but it's nice to have.

Procter and Barnes might be the fastest and most intimidating new-ball pair in the draft. Then Zondeki as a luxury seamer means there's no escaping the pace, even when they're resting.

Petersen and Lindsay at four and five is not outstanding; it risks putting a lot of pressure on Greig and Procter with bat in hand.
@Bevab
Herbie Taylor
Herschelle Gibbs 
Hashim Amla 
Dudley Nourse
Clive Rice 
Faf du Plessis
Thami Tsolikile 
Dik Abed 
Peter Pollock
Keshav Maharaj
Lungi Ngidi 

This team has a fantastic top five (I guessed at your batting order), including two players from an oft-forgotten era of South African cricket.

You've also done excellently with making sure that all your POCs have an important role in the side, which was something I was hoping would occur in the draft. The two in your top three would be worth their places in an unrestricted draft too.

Keshav Maharaj as your only spinner does put pressure on him of the kind he hasn't always responded well to. But then, four front-line fast bowlers probably helps that problem.
@blockerdave
Barry Richards
Jimmy Cook
Peter Kirsten 
Frank Roro 
Basil D'Oliveira 
Lee Irvine
Ben Malamba 
Eric Petersen 
Taliep Sallie 
Garth Le Roux
Krom Hendricks 

This is a very explosive side - from the free scoring of Richards, D'Oliveira and Irvine to the express fast bowling of Le Roux and mystery spin of Sallie.

There is a Plan B for every role in the side; two fast bowlers, two swing bowlers, two spinners, a third opener - there is cover for anyone who has a bad day so they can play without fear.

The only real issue with this team is more of a South Africa issue than a you issue - a lot of your players' achievements are apocryphal, owing to the dreadful record-keeping and infrastructure of non-white cricket before the 70s.
@Dale88
Alviro Petersen 
Loots Bosman 
Jonathan Trott
Graeme Pollock
Farhaan Behardien 
Quinton De Kock
Senuran Muthusamy 
Vince Van Der Bijl
Morne Morkel
Paul Adams 
Makhaya Ntini 

You got a few absolute steals in this draft, most notably by picking
Vince van der Bijl in round nine. A huge man with a huge amount of ability to round off an already intimidating seam attack.

Although you don't bat as deep as some of the other teams, Trott and Pollock is an impressive and contrasting pair of players in the two chief batting positions.

The opening partnership is probably the biggest weakness here; Loots Bosman averaged under 30 in first-class cricket, and you never quite know when Alviro's been given money to throw his wicket away.
@Parth D
Dean Elgar
Temba Bavuma 
Marnus Labuschagne
Daryll Cullinan
AB de Villiers 
JP Duminy 
Andile Phehlukwayo 
Wayne Parnell 
Vernon Philander 
Hugh Tayfield
Charl Langeveldt 

The engine room of your batting order is outstanding - Marnus, Cullinan and de Villiers are all players who can seize control of a match and not let go.

In Philander and Tayfield, you have two of South African cricket's best bowling brains; they should provide leadership for the rest.

There is still a hint of the makeshift about this side though. You've got Bavuma opening, while Phehlukwayo and Parnell are your third and fourth seamers. Not quite ideal.
@qpeedore
Andrew Strauss
Graeme Smith 
Zubayr Hamza 
Neil McKenzie
Faiek Davids 
Mark Boucher
Charlie Llewellyn 
Tabraiz Shamsi 
Allan Donald
Kagiso Rabada 
Lonwabo Tsotsobe 

Leadership. You've got Smith and Strauss, consulting with Boucher behind the stumps and Allan Donald leading the bowling attack.

Donald and Rabada will be taking the new ball, which like so many pairs here is a fearsome proposition.

There's a real lack of batting in this team unfortunately; Hamza is a bit of a pick on potential, but picking Ken McEwan over Neil McKenzie might have helped - even if that still leaves Davids and Boucher at five and six.
@Yash.
Gary Kirsten
Reeza Hendricks 
Aubrey Faulkner
Kevin Pietersen
Colin Bland
Justin Ontong 
Nazeem White 
Khaya Majola 
Alfonso Thomas 
Lutho Sipamala 
Neil Adcock

Having Aubrey Faulkner in this side immediately puts you at an advantage - he's a world-leading batsman and spinner rolled into one, to a greater extent than anyone else has ever been.

Neil Adcock is an underrated player to lead your attack, but he has the bowling stats to match any other available seamer.

Honestly, I can't put my finger on it but I do feel that there's just something missing from this side. I think what I'm not seeing is a second top-class seamer to partner Adcock.
The XI that we missed
Alan Melville
Trevor Goddard
Neville Francis 
Ken McEwan
Ahmed Amla 
Morris Garda 
Matt Prior
Reggie Schwarz
Rushdie Magiet 
Aaron Phangiso 
Junior Dala 

Reggie Schwarz and Aaron Phangiso provide a great combination of attack and defence, as does the duo of Goddard and Dala in our seam attack.

Melville and McEwan are two of South Africa's greatest overlooked batsmen, while Francis and Garda were the two stand out Dadabhay Trophy batsmen before Yacoob Omar came along.

There aren't really any star names, and I think that shows how well we did at picking up most of the very best players available (apart from McEwan really).