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                                                                                            he  elegant  city  of  Hyderabad  is  famed  for  its  unique
                                                                                    combination of cultures. Founded by Mohammed Quli Shah, a
                                                                                    Muslim sultan of the 16th Century, it brings together some fine
                                                                                    Islamic architecture with what is now a predominantly Hindu
                                                                                    population.  In  cricketing  terms,  Hyderabad’s  team  for  the  IPL
                                                                                    – known as the Deccan Chargers – appeared to have pulled off
                                                                                    a similar trick. The two great modern powers of the game are
                                                                                    Australia and India, and by signing Andrew Symonds and Adam
                                                                                    Gilchrist, the Chargers managed to snap up the two outstanding
                                                                                    performers  of  Australia’s  limited-overs  team.  After  the
                                                                                    controversies during India’s tour Down Under at the beginning of
                                                                                    the year, there was some speculation that Australian cricketers
                                                                                    – and Symonds in particular – might be less appealing when the

                                                                                    IPL auction came around. Not a bit of it. Symonds sold for the
                                                                                    astonishing figure of US$1.35million – more than any other non-
                                                                                    Indian in the competition – while Gilchrist also raised $700,000.


                                                                                    The cold logic behind these astronomical figures could not be
                                                                                    denied. Since Symonds came of age at the 2003 World Cup, he
                                                                                    had been the most dominant figure in the one-day international
                                                                                    game. His favourite bit of coaching advice is “See it and hit it,
                                                                                    mate”, and he rarely fails to apply this simple theory during his
                                                                                    spectacular visits to the crease. Few players embodied Australia’s
                                                                                    swaggering self-assurance as perfectly as he did. Gilchrist, too,
                                                                                    had  been  at  the  heart  of  Australia’s  dominance  of  the  major
                                                                                    one-day  tournaments  for  the  past  decade.  No-one  responded
                                                                                    better to the big stage: in three appearances in World Cup finals,
                                                                                    Gilchrist scored 54, 57 and – a squash ball placed in his batting
                                                                                    glove to aid his grip – 149 against Sri Lanka in 2007.


                                                                                    But  the  two  hard-hitting  Australians  were  not  the  only  eye-
                                                                                    catching names in a squad that appeared to have all the batting
                                                                                    ingredients  to  cause  mayhem,  yet  which  ultimately  finished
                                                                                    bottom  of  the  eight-team  group  with  just  two  wins  to  their
                                                                                    name. The gloriously unpredictable Pakistani Shahid Afridi once
                                                                                    hit a one-day international in 37 deliveries and was expected
                                                                                    to  unleash  his  fireworks  once  more,  while  great  deeds  were
                                                                                    expected of South Africa’s Herschelle Gibbs, whose CV boasted
                                                                                    a one-day innings of 175 against Australia, not to mention six
                                                                                    sixes in an over during the 2007 World Cup. The unsung New
                                                                                    Zealand  all-rounder  Scott  Styris  would  provide  runs  at  the













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