The Hundred franchise Southern Braves picked the likes of Adil Rashid, Marcus Stoinis, Tristan Stubbs and Thomas Rew forming a composition that includes young and experienced players alike. After the auction, team’s coach Hemang Badani explained the tricky task of manoeuvring a cricket auction. Badani emphasised that discipline and patience are crucial during an auction, particularly in a fast-moving process where plans can quickly unravel.
“The major thing about auctions is that you need to be disciplined and stick to your plan,” he said. “Even when you feel the auction isn’t going in the direction you wanted, you still have to be patient and adapt quickly. The minute you start panicking, things can go wrong.”According to the former India all-rounder, no franchise walks away with every target.“You’re never going to get all the players you’re looking for,” he said. “If you manage to secure about 70–75 percent of the players or the skill sets you wanted, you’ll be happy.”Southern Braves brought back a familiar name in Chris Jordan, a long-time favourite at the Utilita Bowl, the team’s home venue.“We genuinely believe he has massive value for us,” Badani said. “He’s someone who has been at the Braves, done well here and understands the conditions.”The franchise also made a forward-looking pick by signing England U-19 cricketer Thomas Rew, whose performances at youth level caught the coach’s eye.“I saw him live during the Under-19 World Cup and I thought he batted beautifully,” Badani said. “He strikes the ball well and we believe he’s someone for the future.”Another addition is David Miller, whom Badani has previously worked with at Delhi Capitals. While the prior association helped, Badani said the decision was primarily tactical.“We were looking for a left-hander who could finish games and play spin well in the middle and at the end,” he explained. “To get someone like Miller at the price we did was a steal.”





