BBL overseas draft: Livingstone to Renegades, Boult to Stars, du Plessis and Russell unpicked
The tournament will go head-to-head with the new South Africa and UAE T20 leagues during the congested January window with many of the bigger names having already signed for one of those competitions which, for the leading players, can still provide more money for a shorter tournament. Alongside Russell and du Plessis, Kieron Pollard, Dwayne Bravo and Jason Roy were the platinum players not selected.
“He’s a high-class international leg spinner, he’s very handy with the bat as well, and he’s a gun in the field,” Ponting said of Shadab. “So we think we’re bringing in a three-dimensional cricketer. It looks like he’s got reasonable availability.”
“The challenge the BBL teams have faced the last few years has been the international players coming in and out,” Ponting added. “You get two or three games out of one, and then you have to try to fill that slot with someone of a similar role and ability, and that’s pretty hard to do. And if these players are coming in and out, you’ve got to have money to fill their voids as well. When you’re trying to balance the salary cap, it’s not easy to do.”
“It was a no-brainer for us,” he said as he joined the coverage from Townsville. “What he offers with the bat is exceptional. And what he delivers in the field and with the ball, being able to bowl legspin and offspin, I think he’s a beautiful fit for the Renegades.”
From Monday, teams can start signing replacement players, who can come from anyone nominated in the draft, to fill spaces created by initial selections who will miss parts of the BBL. With each team having taken three overseas in the draft, they have four slots for replacements.
How the draft played out
Melbourne Renegades Liam Livingstone, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Akeal Hosein
Melbourne Stars Trent Boult, Joe Clarke, Luke Wood
Brisbane Heat Sam Billings, Colin Munro, Ross Whiteley
Sydney Sixers Chris Jordan, James Vince, Izharulhaq Naveed
Adelaide Strikers Rashid Khan (retained), Colin de Grandhomme, Adam Hose
Perth Scorchers Laurie Evans (retained), Phil Salt, Tymal Mills
Sydney Thunder David Willey, Alex Hales, Rilee Rossouw
Hobart Hurricanes Shadab Khan, Asif Ali, Faheem Ashraf
Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo
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