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The Hundred’s First Auction Signals a New Era for English Cricket

ben-taylor
Editor
Last updated: Wed 10 Jun 2026 08:56
The Hundred is set to initiate a landmark change in English cricket by introducing an auction system for player allocation, moving away from the traditional draft method. The auction, supported by significant private investment, will see increased budgets for men's and women's competitions. New ownership structures, coupled with rebranding and new coaching staff, promise to reshape teams' strategies. The inclusion of Pakistani players could be impacted by Indian ownership. Additionally, the competition's timing may force players to choose between club and country, potentially altering the cricketing landscape.
Ben Taylor 10 Jun 2026
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  • The Hundred shifts player allocation to an auction format.
  • New ownership and rebranding could reshape cricket teams.
  • Calendar changes may force players to choose between club and country.
The Hundred

The Hundred Auction Could Reshape English Cricket


British sport rarely operates through auctions. Most teams develop players through academy systems, signing talent young and building squads over time. The Hundred is about to challenge that model.

For the first time in British sport, a major league will allocate players through an auction. The inaugural Hundred auction is scheduled to take place in London across the 11th and 12th of March, replacing the draft system used during the tournament’s first five seasons.

Until now, players were distributed through salary tiers and a draft process. The new system will see players not already retained placed into an auction where teams bid directly for their services.

According to the BBC, the changes come after significant private investment in the tournament, with the salary pot for the men’s competition increasing by 45% to £2.05 million per team while the women’s fund has doubled to £880,000.

The shift signals a new phase for the competition and one that will likely reshape how teams are built.

New Ownership and a New Era


Much of this change stems from the new ownership structure behind the tournament.

Last summer the England and Wales Cricket Board sold shares in the eight Hundred franchises to external investors. Many of these investors already own stakes in franchise teams around the world, linking the competition more closely with the global franchise cricket ecosystem.

Five teams remain majority owned by their host counties, with external investors holding minority stakes of 49%.

Welsh Fire is split evenly between Glamorgan and Indian-American businessman Sanjay Govil. Manchester Originals have rebranded as the Manchester Super Giants after the RPSG Group purchased a 70% stake, leaving Lancashire with the remaining share. 

Meanwhile the Northern Superchargers have become Sunrisers Leeds after being bought outright by the Sun Group for around £100 million.

New owners have also brought change on the coaching side. On the men’s side Mike Hussey is the only head coach retained from the previous tournament, while on the women’s side Ali Maiden is the sole coach to remain in place.

With new ownership, rebrands and new coaches arriving, squads themselves could look very different once the auction concludes.

Will Pakistan Players Be Picked?


Another storyline surrounding the auction involves players from Pakistan.

More than 700 male players and over 250 female players originally registered for the draft before the list was reduced ahead of the auction. Among those remaining are 14 male and two female Pakistani players.

For the men’s competition Pakistan is the third most represented international nation behind Australia and South Africa. That includes high-profile names such as Shaheen Afridi and Harris Rauf.

The women’s pool still includes Sadia Iqbal and Fatima Sana.

However the presence of Indian ownership in several teams has raised questions over whether Pakistani players will be selected. Political tensions between India and Pakistan have prevented Pakistani players from appearing in the Indian Premier League since 2009.

The ECB has attempted to ease those concerns by confirming that teams have agreed selections will be made on cricketing ability rather than nationality.

Club or Country?


The Hundred has already divided opinion within English cricket because of where it sits in the domestic calendar.

Earlier editions of the tournament took place during August with no international cricket scheduled at the same time. That meant England’s centrally contracted players were available but it pushed the 50-over county competition, the Metro Bank One Day Cup, into what many described as a second XI tournament.

The calendar has now been adjusted slightly, with the Hundred final scheduled for mid-August while Test cricket returns to the peak of the English summer.

But the change has created another dilemma.

Under previous arrangements the ECB could withdraw centrally contracted players from Hundred matches if they were required for England duty. That authority no longer exists under the new system.

Players will now be contracted directly to their Hundred franchises, meaning they may have to choose between representing their club or their country if schedules collide.

With England players such as Harry Brook, Ben Duckett, Jamie Smith and Will Jacks already signed on deals reportedly worth up to £450,000 before the auction even begins, the potential for difficult decisions later in the summer is very real.

The Hundred was designed to modernise English cricket. The introduction of an auction may do exactly that.

Whether it strengthens the competition or deepens the divide within the English game is something the next few seasons will reveal.

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