Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Players go under hammer in Bangladesh amid pay row

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DHAKA, Dec 20, 2012 (AFP) - About 150 foreigners went under the hammer for the Bangladesh Premier League (BPL) auction Thursday despite a pay row which saw many cricketers not paid their full dues for the first season.

Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan hit the jackpot as he went for $365,000, but the amount was nearly half of what Pakistan's Shahid Afridi was sold for when the country launched the Twenty20 tournament in February.

The BPL is the Bangladesh­i answer to the Indian Premier League (IPL), which revolution­ised cricket when it burst on to the scene in 2008 with a high-octane blend of internatio­nal stars, Twenty20 matches and celebrity glamour.

Pakistani opener Imran Nazir was sold for the second-highest $280,000 and Afridi for $275,000, while more than a dozen foreigners went for over $100,000, according to Channel 9 which telecast the auction live. Bangladesh­i batsman Nasir Hossain was auctioned off for $208,000 but he cast doubt whether he would be paid the amount. He was sold last season for $200,000, the highest among local players, but he was still not paid his dues. “If I am sold at two taka (local currency), please give me

Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan hit the jackpot as he went for $365,000, but the amount was nearly half of what Pakistan's Shahid Afridi was sold for when the country launched the Twenty20 tournament in February

that two taka, not one taka,” Hossain told Bengali daily Prothom Alo, adding he only got a third of his last year's fee. The Federation of Internatio­nal Cricketers' Associatio­n (FICA) in July threatened to sue the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) over unpaid wages by the BPL, calling the situation “a joke”.

BPL secretary I.H. Mallick said the authoritie­s would “at any cost” make the second edition successful, adding about 150 foreign players were taking part in the auction.

“We are expecting more big names. They will be sold in a close bid,” he said, without mentioning the players.

BCB has set a $1.5 million spending cap for each of the seven teams and forced them to write cheques on Thursday for the players who were sold at a price higher than their tagged rate.

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