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Auction draft II - ODI

G.I.Joe

International Coach


The highlight obviously the batting lineup. Albie Morkel walks in at 9, averaging 23 and striking at 100+. It's a batting lineup that will set huge totals, and chase down anything, imnsho.

Sehwag and Watson will get the team off to quick starts, and Richards, Waugh, Jones and Dravid form a formidable middle order. Dravid and Harris are proven finishers. Cairns and Morkel walking in at 8 and 9 will definitely deflate the hopes of many an attack, and their quick scoring will be useful both at the death as well as in the event they are promoted up the order.

Lee, Kulasekara, Watson, Cairns and Morkel form the 5 man attack.
Richards, Waugh, Sehwag and Harris form the 6th bowler collectively.

With 9 players playing major roles with the bat, and 9 players capable of rolling their arm over, this team is certainly not short of options. Porterfield fill in for any injured batsman, and Harper gets consideration for spinning tracks, although Richards, Waugh and Sehwag are more than capable in that department, imo.
 

Somerset

Cricketer Of The Year
McDermott a great final addition, finally makes my side look balanced in terms of the pace/spin combination.

Nick Knight
Michael Vaughan
Kumar Sangakkara
Andy Flower
VVS Laxman
Sir Garfield Sobers
Ravi Shastri
Shane Warne (c)
Mushtaq Ahmed or Ajantha Mendis
Makhaya Ntini
Craig McDermott

12th man: Mushtaq Ahmed or Ajantha Mendis
13th man: Sreesanth
 

Noble One

International Vice-Captain
1. Graeme Smith (149 ODI, 5613 Runs @ 40.67)
2. Sourav Ganguly (311 ODI, 11363 Runs @ 41.02, 100 Wickets @ 38.49)
3. Herscelle Gibbs (248 ODI, 8094 Runs @ 36.13)
4. Stephen Fleming (280 ODI, 8037 Runs @ 32.40)
5. Imran Khan (175 ODI, 3709 Runs @ 33.41, 182 Wickets @ 26.61)
6. Lance Klusener (171 ODI, 3576 Runs @ 41.10, 192 Wickets @ 29.95)
7. Brendan McCullum (171 ODI, 3569 Runs @ 29.01, 189 Ctch, 13 Stmp)
8. Shahid Afridi (296 ODI, 6222 Runs @ 23.93, 278 Wickets @ 34.73)
9. Ian Harvey (73 ODI, 715 Runs @ 17.87, 85 Wickets @ 30.31)
10. Nathan Bracken (116 ODI, 199 Runs @ 11.70, 174 Wickets @ 24.36)
11. Shoaib Akhtar (147 ODI, 377 Runs @ 9.66, 227 Wickets @ 23.96)

12. Paul Collingwood (182 ODI, 4843 Runs @ 36.96, 103 Wickets @ 38.86)
13. Pommie Mbangwa (29 ODI, 34 Runs @ 4.85, 11 Wickets @ 103.63)

I will compile a more detailed analysis of my side later.
 

weldone

Hall of Fame Member
Wow, this ends on a superb note for me. Now I can claim to have the best lineup among all, without a doubt. I was just a bit apprehensive before the results of this round as I badly wanted Ambrose.

A perfect opening combination of Jayasuriya and Kirsten, followed by one of the best middle-orders in this thread- one of Inzamam, Bevan, Waugh and Jayawardene, followed by two hard-hitters Boucher (whose wicketkeeping skills are among the best) and Pollock. I love my batting lineup.

An opening bowling combination of Pollock and Ambrose- does it get any better in ODIs? A first-change bowler like Vaas who, himself, is the best-ever pace bowler of a non-dud cricketing nation and has 400 wickets and a great strike rate, is an asset to my side. Kumble is probably the 4th best spinner to have played ODIs, and completes my list of 4 specialist bowlers. Jayasuriya's spin and Waugh's medium pace in the middle-overs are expected to take care of 10 overs, regardless of pitch type. The fact that Bevan could also bowl well in ODIs is just a bonus.

Overall a superb team, a combination of 11 good to great to all-time great players to form a superbly balanced lineup.

O, and I forgot, I have two other players who, according to cricinfo statsguru, takes the least average time to carry drinks and towels, respectively.
 
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weldone

Hall of Fame Member
So that's this one run, and I'm going to take a break before launching another, most likely T20, but may be some other twist possibly...
Good job, marc.

But, count me out of the T20 draft, spare me the horror :P ...T20, for me, is something that can be watched when I have nothing better to do in life. Spending any time thinking about the T20 games and the players is a sheer waste of time for me. And participating in this kind of an auction for T20 might just make me suicidal.

But this thread was great fun, and I wish I could participate in the test draft too. Might have given Himanv a hard time.
 

weldone

Hall of Fame Member
Playing XI:
Sanath Jayasuriya (Devastating Opener - 13,428 runs, SR 91.22, 5th Bowler Spin - 322 wickets)
Gary Kirsten (Opening Batsman - Avg. 40.95, 13 centuries)
Inzamam-ul-Haq (Expert Middle-order - Avg. 39.52, 83 fifties, SR 74.24)
Michael Bevan (Star Middle-order - Avg. 53.58, SR 74.16)
Steve Waugh (Middle-order - 7569 runs, 5th Bowler Pace - 195 wickets, Captain - 67 wins in 106 matches)
Mahela Jayawardene (Lower Middle-order - 8863 runs, SR 77.21, 12 centuries)
Mark Boucher (Star Wicketkeeper - 400 catches, 22 stumpings, Lower-order Hitter - Avg. 28.79, SR 84.72)
Shaun Pollock (Star Opening Bowler - ER 3.67, 393 wickets, Avg. 24.5, Lower-order Hitter - Avg. 26.45, SR 86.69)
Chaminda Vaas (First Change Bowler - 400 wickets, ER 4.18, Avg. 27.52)
Curtly Ambrose (Star Opening Bowler - ER 3.48, Avg. 24.12, 225 wickets)
Anil Kumble (Spin Bowler - 337 wickets, ER 4.30)

Drinks and Towels Carriers:
Hrishikesh Kanitkar (Important Stat: $1)
Prosper Utseya (Important Stat: $2)
 
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honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
Love that I have Chanderpaul now.. Gonna have the old fashioned approach.. my batting line up.. Easily the best middle order in the draft, in my own not so humble opinion.. :p


And a pace attack to die for for ODIs.. Hadlee and Waqar, followed by Gillespie and Walsh.. Price with an ER of 3.9 to tighten the noose in the middle overs.. A batting line up Chanderpaul and Boon to get us off to steady starts.. Ponting to be the star at #3.. Javed Miandad to get us home though the tricky middle overs.. AB and Huss to take care of business if it gets down to them.. Hadlee and Gillespie to lend support whenever needed.. I so badly wish there were sims.. My team would have surely been among the best.. :(


Honest Hunks (ODI Version):


Shivnarine Chanderpaul - 8648 runs @ 42 @ 71 SR - 14 wkts @ 45 @ 5.2 ER - 73 Catches
David Boon - 5964 runs @ 37 @ 65
Ricky Ponting (c) - 12895 runs @ 43.12 @ SR 80.1 - 148 Catches
Javed Miandad (vc) - 7381 runs @ 42 @ SR of 67 - 7 wkts @ 42 w/ ER of 4.1 - 71 Catches - 2 Stumpings
AB De Villiers (wk) - 3603 runs @ 44 @ 89 SR - 63 Catches (Protea keepers don get many stumpings ;) )
Michael Hussey - 4207 runs @ 52 @ 88 SR - 80 Catches
Richard Hadlee - 1751 runs @ 22 @ SR of 76 - 158 wkts @ 21 w/ ER of 3.3 - 27 catches
Jason Gillespie - 289 runs @ 13 @ SR of 79 - 152 wkts @ 25 w/ ER of 4.2 - 10 catches
Waqar Younis - 969 runs @ 10 @ SR of 67 - 416 wkts @ 23 w/ ER of 4.68 - 35 catches
Ray Price - 73 wkts @ 35 w/ 3.88 ER
Courtney Walsh - 227 wkts @ 30 / 3.83 ER



Paul Strang - 1090 runs - 22 batting avg - 66 batting SR - 30 catches - 96 wkts - 33 bwlg avg - 4.36 ER
Joginder Sharma - did he ever play ODIs?
 

honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
On second thought, I feel I have the closest to the old fashioned ODI side.. Best 5 batsmen, a wicket keeper and best 5 bowlers.. And back the 5 bowlers to do the job everytime and the 6 batsmen to do the same... No need for bowlers to bat mostly and no need for batters to bowl.. :)
 

Blakus

State Vice-Captain
Hooper is a good addition to my side. Gives me a classy batsman and an excellent 6th bowling option. Also allows me to put Parore into the reserves. Always a good thing to have a spare keeper.

1.Matthew Hayden 6133 @ 43.80 SR 78.96
2.Saeed Anwar 8824 @ 39.21 SR 80.67
3.Zaheer Abbas 2572 @ 47.62 SR 84.80
4.Jacques Kallis 10838 @ 45.72 SR 72.72 , 254 @ 32.05 Eco 4.83
5.Mohinder Dhoni+ 5593 @ 51.31 SR 89.48 , 164 catches 53 Stumpings
6.Carl Hooper 5761 @ 35.34 SR 76.63 , 193 @ 36.05 Eco 4.36
7.Graham Thorpe 2380 @ 37.18 SR 71.17
8.Kapil Dev* 3783 @ 23.79 SR 95.07 , 253 @ 27.45 Eco 3.71
9.Ajit Agarkar 1269 @ 14.58 SR 80.62 , 288 @ 27.85 Eco 5.07
10.Graeme Swann 250 @ 12.5 SR 76.21 , 45 @ 26.55 Eco 4.56
11.Allan Donald 95 @ 4.31 SR 34.05 , 272 @ 21.78 Eco 4.15

12.Hitesh Modi 1109 @ 23.59 SR 58.18
13.Adam Parore 3314 @ 25.68 SR 68.09 , 197 catches 7 Stumpings

I'll back this side to be beat any of the others. My top 5 in particular is excellent. All 5 are capable of building innings or hitting out. Hooper and Thorpe serve as the rescue acts should the top order ever fail. Kapil Dev will serve as both inspirational captain and allrounder. Donald spearheads a flexible attack that would be unwise to underestimate.
 

honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
Hooper is a good addition to my side. Gives me a classy batsman and an excellent 6th bowling option. Also allows me to put Parore into the reserves. Always a good thing to have a spare keeper.

1.Matthew Hayden 6133 @ 43.80 SR 78.96
2.Saeed Anwar 8824 @ 39.21 SR 80.67
3.Zaheer Abbas 2572 @ 47.62 SR 84.80
4.Jacques Kallis 10838 @ 45.72 SR 72.72 , 254 @ 32.05 Eco 4.83
5.Mohinder Dhoni+ 5593 @ 51.31 SR 89.48 , 164 catches 53 Stumpings
6.Carl Hooper 5761 @ 35.34 SR 76.63 , 193 @ 36.05 Eco 4.36
7.Graham Thorpe 2380 @ 37.18 SR 71.17
8.Kapil Dev* 3783 @ 23.79 SR 95.07 , 253 @ 27.45 Eco 3.71
9.Ajit Agarkar 1269 @ 14.58 SR 80.62 , 288 @ 27.85 Eco 5.07
10.Graeme Swann 250 @ 12.5 SR 76.21 , 45 @ 26.55 Eco 4.56
11.Allan Donald 95 @ 4.31 SR 34.05 , 272 @ 21.78 Eco 4.15

12.Hitesh Modi 1109 @ 23.59 SR 58.18
13.Adam Parore 3314 @ 25.68 SR 68.09 , 197 catches 7 Stumpings

I'll back this side to be beat any of the others. My top 5 in particular is excellent. All 5 are capable of building innings or hitting out. Hooper and Thorpe serve as the rescue acts should the top order ever fail. Kapil Dev will serve as both inspirational captain and allrounder. Donald spearheads a flexible attack that would be unwise to underestimate.
Really.. even with AA there????? :p
 

weldone

Hall of Fame Member
Really.. even with AA there????? :p
Come on, there are 9 teams among 10 in this thread that contain a mediocre player in the playing XI, at least (and you know which one doesn't :) ). And Agarkar hasn't been among the worst ODI bowlers ever. For a short period, his record was impressive. But overall ER is way too high. Still, not a dud by ODI standards (more so keeping other Indian fast bowlers in mind); but a mediocre player no doubt. But otherwise, Blakus has an impressive team. A great batting lineup, and an OK bowling lineup too. I believe his team is probably the best among the 9 except mine (don't know how Pothas' team look like, as he hasn't posted his team in the last few rounds).
 

honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
I think your team is great too, but I think it is a little too difficult to judge which is the best at this point... I will give my feed back on teams on the voting thread but right now, I feel this draft is too close to call, even if I am not gonna rate my own team.. :)
 

marc71178

Eyes not spreadsheets
O, and I forgot, I have two other players who, according to cricinfo statsguru, takes the least average time to carry drinks and towels, respectively.
Nah, afraid that Kanitkar has never done it outside of the sub-continent and Utseya hasn't done it when you exclude minnow games.
 

Himannv

Hall of Fame Member
1. Romesh Kaluwitharana + -- 3711 runs @ Av:22.22: SR:77.70 | Ct:132: St:75
2. Sachin Tendulkar -- 17598 runs @ Av:45.12: SR:86.26 | 154 wickets @ Av:44.26: SR:52.0 Econ:5.10
3. Hansie Cronje (c) -- 5565 runs @ Av:38.64: SR:76.47 | 114 wickets @ Av:34.78: SR:46.9 Econ:4.44
4. Darren Lehmann -- 3078 runs @ Av:38.96: SR:81.34 | 52 wickets @ Av:27.78: SR:34.4 Econ:4.83
5. Allan Border (vc) -- 6524 runs @ Av:30.62: SR:71.42 | 73 wickets @ Av:28.36: SR:36.4 Econ:4.66
6. Jonty Rhodes -- 5935 runs @ Av:35.11: SR:80.90
7. Angelo Mathews -- 547 runs @ Av:34.18: SR:80.32 | 20 wickets @ Av:31.45: SR:39.6 Econ:4.76
8. Shakib al Hasan -- 2340 runs @ Av:33.42: SR:76.47 | 100 wickets @ Av:30.91: SR:44.6 Econ:4.15
9. Andy Roberts -- 87 wickets @ Av:20.35: SR:35.8 Econ:3.40
10. Joel Garner -- 146 wickets @ Av:18.84: SR:36.5 Econ:3.09
11. Muttiah Muralitharan -- 515 wickets @ Av:23.07: SR:35.2 Econ:3.92

12. Robin Singh -- 2336 runs @ Av:25.95: SR:74.30 | 69 wickets @ Av:43.26: SR:54.1 Econ:4.79
13. Geoff Boycott -- 1082 runs @ Av:36.06: SR:53.56


1. Romesh Kaluwitharana + - RH
Little Kalu can give this team a bit of aggression in the opening overs and is very used to taking advantage of the fielding restrictions with all those scoops and over the infield shots. If nothing else, he would at least give the team a good start. Not the worst thing to have the best ODI batsman in the world as your opening partner either. As a keeper, he's quick, innovative and quite yappy behind the stumps. Who better to keep to Murali anyway.

2. Sachin Tendulkar - RH
Best batsman in the world, end of. Name it, he's done it. I have nothing to say, no adjective is enough. Plus his bowling is pretty darn good and at one point he was one of the better bowlers for India with those enormous leg spinners pitched into the rough.

3. Hansie Cronje (c) - RH
With some aggressive batting, intelligent medium-pace bowling and brilliant fielding, Cronje was a formidable competitor in the game. Exceptionally good at playing spin, he's tackled the best in the business and done well. Although not really being exceptional in Tests, his ODI record was far more impressive with the ability to go after the bowling as well as the temperement to build good partnerships. His medium pacers were also exceptionally useful, specially in the earlier part of his career so he could well play a role with the ball if we wishes to bring himself on. As a captain, he was inspirational and appeared to be an exceptional man manager. His captaincy records have been exceptional and to this day have been some of the best from his country. The unfortunate match fixing incidents however marred what was to be a great career at the helm for South Africa.

4. Darren Lehmann - LH
One of the more underrated players of all time, Lehmann is solid with the bat and yet an exceptional strokeplayer. His performances in this format of the game have been exceptional and he's a winner through and through. With aggression and finesse, his batting has been both entertaining and effective. He fits this slot in the lineup almost perfectly. His slow left armers are also exceptionally effective, useful and underrated as well. He will definitely turn his arm over for the team in the middle and late overs.

5. Allan Border (vc) - LH
A fighter to the very core, Border is one of the best batsman produced by Australia and indeed appears to have the gritty and determined approach that has epitomised them Aussies. Solid with the bat and a good fielder, Border brings a certain toughness to the middle order of this team. His immense experience as captain of Australia when they weren't so good a team, lands him the vice captaincy. His vaulable advice would come in handy for certain. Additionally, his slow left armers are more than useful in this format of the game.

6. Jonty Rhodes - RH
Arguably the best fielder in the world, expect backward point to be a no score zone. When he's not flying through the air taking blinders and effecting stunning, match-changing runouts, he's scoring some important runs in the middle of the innings. Able to play the situation and go for the hard hits as well, Jonty is an integral part of the middle order and will drive this team forward.

7. Angelo Mathews - RH
Widely regarded as the next best thing in Sri Lankan cricket. His consistency with the bat has got his country out of numerous tight situations. He has the ability to read the situation as well as go for the big shots. Certainly a match winner with the bat. As a bowler, he is capable of playing many roles. He can be restrictive with numerous unreadable variations in pace. Additionally he has the ability of moving the ball both away and into batsman that tends to lead to wickets in early overs. Not exceptionally quick but hits the deck hard and makes the most of it. Will probably come in as first change and continue the good work started by Roberts and Garner. May play a part in the middle overs and death as well if needed. A thinking cricketer and a future captain of Sri Lanka.

8. Shakib al Hasan - LH
A penetrative and economical left arm spinner, he would compliment Murali easily and make things very tight for batsmen. With those two bowling in tandem in the middle overs, expect some serious efficiency in the middle overs. With the bat as well, Shakib has been exceptional in a comparatively weak team. His consistency has been amazing and with a batsman averaging 30+ coming in at 8, this team can only reap in the rewards.

9. Andy Roberts - RH
Emotionless and expressionless, Roberts was a killer of a bowler who was another of those legendary West Indies quicks. Brutal and effective he took the game by storm. His intelligence however was one of his biggest weapons and very often got him wickets. His ability to move the ball as well as one of the most feared bouncers in the game made him a dangerous customer to deal with. His miserly economy rate was a mere additional bonus. Will partner Garner with the new ball.

10. Joel Garner - RH
Big Bird was one of those fearsome foursome in the 80's that combined exceptionally well with the other members of his team in Tests. In ODI's however he was a giant, and not just in terms of his massive 6 foot 8 frame. Impossible to get away in the death overs with those exceptionally accurate and deadly toe crushers. The bouncers, delivered from the clouds it seemed, and at a lively pace that when the mood took could be cranked up to the brisk side of rapid, the ball would rear alarmingly from barely short of a length. An exceptional average of 18.84 and economy of 3.09 is more than richly deserved. Will take the new ball.

11. Muthiah Muralitharan - RH
Simply put, the highest wicket taker of all time. In Tests, he's certainly a force to reckon with but in this format, he certainly comes into a class of his own. Takes wickets by the bucketfuls and rarely gives away runs cheaply as an economy rate of under 4 suggests with over more than a decade of bowling to boot. Additionally, he's number 11 slogger par excellece as well lol.

12. Robin Singh - LH/RH
The figures dont tell the entire story for this guy. Certainly one of the better fielders the Indians have produced, this man does it all; bats left handed, bowls right handed and throws with either. Holds the lower middle order together well and can score quickly if the situation demands. As a bowler, he's fairly useful in the middle overs with a mixed bag of cutters, slower ones and a bit of swing. A poor man's Kapil Dev and I was a poor man that round. As 12th man however, he's well worth his weight in gold.

13. Geoff Boycott - RH
Very unfortunate not to be in the starting lineup. Very solid bat who defies the odds to make runs. Not exactly his sort of format to thrive in but if the team ever need a player to bat solidly through the innings on a tough track this is the man to do it. Self-centered, arrogant, charming and brilliant, Boycs can easily step in for one of the others if the batting needs some serious steel.
 

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