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Hundred to drop draft in favour of IPL-style auction as new owners’ influence grows

about 4 hours ago
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The Hundred will adopt a new system of player recruitment next season, with the draft to be dropped in favour of an open auction that gives franchises the chance to make direct signings on multi-year deals.The Guardian has learned that after discussions between the new ownership groups, the new investors have agreed to adopt a hybrid model similar to that used in the Indian Premier League, where franchises are permitted to offer contracts of up to three years that are negotiated directly with the incoming player.The recruitment system will be one of the main items on the agenda when the new Hundred board meets for the first time on Monday, with formal signoff of the updated regulations expected in October and the first auction planned for next February.The England and Wales Cricket Board introduced the draft before the Hundred’s planned launch in 2020, which was delayed by 12 months due to the Covid-19 pandemic, with each franchise permitted to sign two players each from seven fixed salary bands, ranging from £30,000 to £125,000 for the men’s competition.While the top men’s salary has increased to £200,000 and other minor changes have been made – such as introducing 10 retained player slots and allowing each franchise to make one direct overseas signing for the first time this summer – the draft has largely remained unchanged.

A source involved in the discussions said the new investors, who have paid a total of £520m for stakes of between 49% and 100% in the eight franchises, want a major shake-up of recruitment with the emphasis on greater player movement, bigger budgets and more big-name overseas signings.As a result, the squad salary pot for 15 players of £1.2m in the men’s competition and £429,000 in the women’s tournament will increase next year.Franchises will not be obliged to spend up to the cap, but a so-called salary collar will be introduced to guarantee a minimum level of investment in the hope of ensuring the Hundred remains competitive.While the finer details have yet to be agreed, it is understood that about 12 players in each squad will be allocated via an open auction with franchises able to bid as much as they want, as long as they stay within the overall cap.

Beyond that franchises will have the flexibility to negotiate directly with up to three players and offer them longer-term contracts for the first time.While not a completely free market, it is anticipated that the new model will lead to the biggest amount of movement between franchises since the start of the Hundred, as well as giving the players more freedom.Increasing the salary cap should help firmly establish the Hundred as the second-biggest short-form competition in the world after the IPL and attract some of the overseas players who have previously preferred to spend the summer playing in Major League Cricket in the United States, such as Steve Smith, Glenn Maxwell and Quinton de Kock.Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionThe 30% salary increases this year brought wage levels on par with those on offer in Australia’s Big Bash Leagues.The top men’s salary of £200,000 falls into the AUS$360,000-$420,000 range for platinum BBL picks, while the top women’s salary of £65,000 is slightly more than the AUS$110,000 on offer in the WBBL.

As previously reported, a change of playing conditions to a Twenty20 competition is on the cards, and will be discussed at next week’s board meeting,The Hundred board is comprised of four representatives from the ECB and one each from the eight host venues and new investors, giving the franchises the balance of power,In a potentially intriguing development, Ravichandran Ashwin’s announcement that he is retiring from the IPL earlier on Wednesday has raised the prospect of the first Indian player being recruited by a Hundred franchise next year,The Board of Control for Cricket in India bars current Indian players from appearing in foreign franchise leagues, but this restriction no longer affects Ashwin, who the Daily Telegraph reports is eager to explore playing in the Hundred and other global competitions,Dinesh Karthik became the first Indian player to feature in the South African SA20 competition this year, so there is a precedent for Ashwin to follow after his domestic retirement.

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The Spin | ‘I’ll bat anywhere for England’: in-form Jordan Cox confident of making the step up

Jordan Cox’s timing has been off. Not with the bat – it’s pinged off the middle for some time. The 24-year-old has averaged more than 60 in the County Championship since joining Essex from Kent two years ago, and he has serious white-ball pedigree. He meets the Spin at the Oval four days after his unbeaten 29-ball 86 in the Hundred on this ground. “It’s the best place in the world to play cricket,” he says

about 9 hours ago
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A Mets-Yankees-Red Sox super division sounds crazy. Until you think about it ...

It’s been more than a week since MLB commissioner Rob Manfred dropped his latest bomb. Manfred, as we’ve learned, enjoys throwing ideas out into the universe to get his sport some easy pop while seeing how the masses will react. Just a few months back, he scrambled the brains of baseball fans with his idea of a “golden at bat”, which would allow a chosen player to come to the plate, once a game, when it wasn’t their turn to hit. Oh, he got his publicity alright: many of us took the bait. Was it a genuine, bona fide idea? Probably not

about 9 hours ago
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Mitch Brown’s coming out shows the AFL what courage and grace look like | Jonathan Horn

As a footy writer, I keep a rather shambolic database of current and former footballers. It’s kind of a buoy I can grab on to when I’m up against a nasty deadline. Sometimes it’s four of five paragraphs; sometimes it’s a sentence on so-and-so’s inability to kick on his left, or his poor record against a certain player, or something vaguely interesting he said on a podcast. When Mitch Brown became the first man in VFL/AFL history to come out as gay or bisexual, I was curious to see what I had written on him. Here’s my Pulitzer worthy offering: “Nathan’s twin

about 12 hours ago
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From the Pocket: AFL finals fever cools as buds of the silly season shoot early

Winter is done, spring has sprung. The AFL season has finally found a wave of momentum. Port Adelaide leaned into their emotion, Collingwood and GWS Giants hung on in thrillers, Fremantle sealed their return to the finals. A neatly scheduled four days of football filled with tension ended as Brisbane reaffirmed their premiership credentials.The home-and-away season has reached a crescendo, and there is still one more game to play

about 13 hours ago
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Stan to show more ads despite price hike amid ‘extraordinary’ Premier League impact

Streaming provider Stan is set to introduce more advertisements on its sporting broadcasts despite recently raising its price by $5 per month, as it enjoys an increase of around 100,000 subscribers directly thanks to its acquisition of the Premier League rights from Optus.The chief executive of its parent company Nine Entertainment, Matt Stanton, confirmed in Nine’s annual results briefing on Wednesday there will be no more Premier League matches on free-to-air after this Saturday’s clash between Chelsea and Fulham, despite outstanding audience numbers in the first two weeks.Last weekend’s 9.30pm AEST clash between Manchester City and Tottenham attracted an average audience of 567,000 across Nine and Stan, with a reach of over 1.5m, according to Stanton

about 15 hours ago
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Coco Gauff digs deep to survive Ajla Tomljanović test in US Open marathon

Coco Gauff survived a shaky serving performance to battle past Ajla Tomljanović in the first round of the US Open, winning 6-4, 6-7 (2), 7-5 after 2hr 57min on Tuesday night.The No 3 seed finished with 10 double faults, was broken six times and squandered a string of opportunities to close the contest earlier, but conjured enough resilience to scrape into round two under the lights on Arthur Ashe Stadium.Gauff appeared in control after winning five of six games from a break down to take the opener and twice leading by a break in the second. Yet she faltered when serving for the match at 5-4 in the third, conceding two double faults and a pair of forehand errors as Tomljanović levelled at 5-5.The 21-year-old American responded instantly, breaking back before sealing victory at her second attempt with a crisp backhand winner down the line, lifting her arms to the crowd in relief as much as celebration

about 15 hours ago
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The death of the review? Cultural criticism is at risk of erasure

1 day ago
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Autumn arts preview games

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‘Wall of blowing dust’ sweeps through Burning Man festival and upends camps

2 days ago
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Noel Clarke libel case: a resounding victory for the Guardian, women and the law | Letters

2 days ago
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‘The pope complained about the lyrics!’: the Bluebells and Siobhan Fahey on how they made Young at Heart

2 days ago
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Can Netflix find your new favourite watch based on your star sign?

2 days ago