MUMBAI: South Africa’s Heinrich Klaasen edged cricket superstar Virat Kohli to become the most expensive player retained in the Indian Premier League (IPL) on Thursday.
Sunrisers Hyderabad re-signed the hard-hitting wicketkeeper-batsman for $2.73 million alongside skipper Australians Pat Cummins and Travis Head.
The 33-year-old Klaasen amassed 479 runs including four half-centuries at a strike rate of over 171 in this year’s IPL as Sunrisers Hyderabad ended runners-up.
Heinrich Klaasen surpassed the previous $2.02 million paid by Royal Challengers Bengaluru to Virat Kohli in 2017.
Kohli kept up his bond with Bengaluru for $2.5 million in the lucrative T20 tournament as the retention deadline ended on Thursday.
Top Indian players including Rishabh Pant and KL Rahul have parted ways with their franchises to head into the IPL mega auction, which is expected to be held next month.
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Australia’s Mitchell Starc holds the auction record after Kolkata brought him for $2.98 million in December last year.
Pant left Delhi Capitals after he led the team in this year’s IPL following his return to competitive cricket from a serious car crash in December 2022.
Rahul was not among the list of players retained by Lucknow Super Giants, who kept West Indies´ Nicholas Pooran for $2.5 million.
Other top players on the auction table will be England’s Jos Buttler, who was not retained by Rajasthan Royals, and South African Faf du Plessis, out of Bengaluru.
Defending champions Kolkata Knight Riders released their skipper Shreyas Iyer but held onto the West Indies duo of Andre Russell and Sunil Narine.
Five-time winners Chennai extended their association with 43-year-old MS Dhoni, who comes in as an uncapped player after he retired from international cricket in 2020.
Five-time champions Mumbai Indians retained their top names including skipper Hardik Pandya, Rohit Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah and Suryakumar Yadav.
The 10-team IPL, which began in 2008, has transformed the global cricket economy and spawned other T20 league competitions around the world.