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Kenpachi Zaraki
02-06-2009, 02:21 PM
Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff became the most expensive IPL purchases when they were sold for USD1.55 million each.

The hard-hitting Pietersen (Mallya happy to buy KP), who was England's captain till recently, was bought by Bangalore Royal Challengers while Flintoff went to Chennai Super Kings at the auction which was beamed live by most television channels.

Bangalore Royal Challengers, who had finished in the bottom half of the high-profile League in the inaugural edition, spent most of their total amount of USD 1.95 million on the highly talented Pietersen who had base price of USD 1.35 million.

Freddie has heavy pockets

Flintoff, another former England captain, expectedly got a good bidding and will now feature in the same team as MS Dhoni who is the captain of Chennai Super Kings.

Among other players first to be auctioned, Australia's Shuan Tait was purchased by title holders of the inaugural edition Rajasthan Royals for USD 375,000 while upcoming South African batsman Jean Paul Duminy went to Mumbai Indians for USD 950,000.

West Indian paceman Fidel Edwards was bought for his base price of USD 150,000 by Deccan Chargers. England's Owais Shah and Paul Collingwood were bought by Delhi Daredevils for USD 275,000 each.

New contracts

IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi said that the contracts of all the auctioned players will be for two years. Owner of Bangalore Royal Challengers Vijay Mallya said he was always keen to get the services of Pietersen as he would add value to the team.

"I was always keen to get Pietersen. He would be a superb addition to the team. We had a list of players before the auction and KP topped that list. We needed to strengthen our batting and I was prepared to pay more for him," Mallya said.

"It is a worthwhile investment and ensure the balance that we wanted in our team", he said.

And then there was Tyron

South African all rounder Tyron Henderson was bought by Rajasthan Royals for USD 650,000 (appr Rs 3.18 crore), a massive jump from his base price of USD 100,000.

Australian opener Phil Jaques went unsold alongwith South African batsman Ashwell Prince. Australian paceman Stuart Clark, who had a base price of USD 250,000 also failed to attract a buyer in the initial round of auctioning.

Another Australian Luke Wright also went unsold with the bidders not showing much interest on the Australians who were up for auction.

England all-rounder Ravi Bopara was bought by Kings XI Punjab for USD 450,000 (appr Rs 2.20 crore), far beyond his base price of USD 150,000.

Some made it and some did not

New Zealand all-rounder Jesse Ryder was bought for USD 160,000 by Bangalore Royal Challengers while another Kiwis cricketer Kyle Mills was taken by Mumbai Indians for USD 150,000.

South African paceman Andre Nel went unsold. Sri Lankan paceman Nuwan Kulasekara also failed to make much of an impact with no team showing any interest in him.

With a total of USD 13.59 million in their pockets, the eight Indian Premier League franchisees had the option of buying 17 players from a pool of 50.

In the auction, 18 players from Australia, seven from England, five from Sri Lanka, three from New Zealand, seven from South Africa, six from West Indies and four from Bangladesh were up for grabs.

Chennai Super Kings had a spending limit of upto USD two million for two slots, the Deccan Chargers USD 1.9 million for two, the Knight Riders USD 1.21 million for one, the Kings' XI Punjab USD 1.45 million for two, Mumbai Indians USD 1.76 million for three players, Rajasthan Royals USD 1.875 million for two and Bangalore Royal Challengers USD 1.945 for two slots.

Mortaza, the surprise package

Bangladesh paceman Mashrafe Mortaza went for 12 times his base price of USD 50,000.

In a fierce bidding war between King XI Punjab and Kolkata Knight Riders, that lasted close to half an hour, the Shah Rukh Khan-owned outfit bought him for a whopping USD 600,000 (approx Rs 2.94 cr).

Knight Riders had made their interest in Mortaza known even before the bidding.

The Aussies were once again ignored with their wicket-keeper Brad Haddin failing to find a buyer.

After the second round of auction, Modi said the number of unsold players has gone up this year because of the limited slots the teams have.

"More unsold players is a result of limited slots. The teams have just 17 slots to fill," he said.

"We wanted him too"

Kings XI stake-holder Preity Zinta said she desperately wanted Mortaza.

"Mortaza is a great player, an all-rounder and we wanted him. But you win some, you lose some," the Bollywood star said.

Rajasthan Royals stake-holder Shilpa Shetty was, on the other hand, was happy to have to got the players her team wanted.

"We got what we wanted," she said after Royals acquired Aussie pacer Shaun Tait and big-hitting South African all-rounder Tyron Henderson.

ESS