The New Zealand Herald

Crammed with talent

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players. None have opted for more than three at present, but can exercise a right-to-match option during the auction.

A lifetime of financial security can become reality with a bang of the gavel . . . but speculatio­n can prove fickle.

Corey Anderson earned a contract with the Mumbai Indians in 2014, principall­y on the back of his then world-record 36-ball ODI century against the West Indies at Queenstown.

In contrast, Martin Guptill only got picked by the same franchise in 2016 as a replacemen­t. After a stellar limited overs season he missed out despite being listed as one of eight marquee players in the original bidding.

Munro and Sodhi’s prospects will be the most intriguing to observe.

Sodhi was joint top of the wickettaki­ng charts at the 2016 World T20 in India with 10, then scythed through the Sydney Thunder, taking 6-11 for the Adelaide Strikers last January in the BBL. No IPL franchise were interested. Munro will discover whether his transition to play as a limited overs opener has been convincing, after becoming the first player to score three T20 internatio­nal centuries last week.

He has played only four IPL matches, all for the Kolkata Knight Riders in 2016 as part of a $67,000 deal. Another season he was part of the Mumbai Indians’ squad but did not play.

Williamson ($121,000 at Sunrisers Hyderabad last season) and Mitchell McClenagha­n (the fourth-highest wicket-taker last season on $61,000 at the Mumbai Indians) might also have their salaries boosted.

Last season New Zealand’s presence was weighted in favour of pace bowlers with Boult (Kolkata Knight Riders), Matt Henry (Kings XI Punjab), Lockie Ferguson (Rising Pune Supergiant), Adam Milne (Royal Challenger­s Bangalore) and Tim Southee and McClenagha­n (Mumbai Indians) involved.

Colin de Grandhomme (KKR) and Anderson (Delhi Daredevils) flew the New Zealand all-rounder flag, while Williamson (Sunrisers Hyderabad), Guptill (KXIP) and Brendon McCullum (Gujarat Lions) had batting gigs.

Those numbers could be about to expand.

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