The BPL Season 12 auction painted a picture of strategic restraint rather than extravagant spending. Despite the allowance of Tk 45 million for signing local players, no franchise approached the ceiling. Instead, financial prudence and squad balance appeared to dictate the day’s decisions.
Rangpur Riders emerged as the highest spenders, allocating Tk 41.6 million for 12 local players. Chattogram Royals were close behind with Tk 38.7 million, largely due to their record-breaking capture of Mohammad Naim for Tk 11 million—the highest fee awarded in this year’s auction. Rajshahi Warriors, focusing on building depth, recruited 13 players for Tk 38.1 million.
Noakhali Express demonstrated the most frugality, spending only Tk 26.3 million. Sylhet Titans and Dhaka Capitals maintained mid-range spending at Tk 27.4 million and Tk 33.8 million respectively.
In the overseas segment, spending was remarkably low. Teams could have invested up to USD 350,000, but three franchises barely touched USD 50,000. Dhaka Capitals stood apart, purchasing three foreign players for USD 75,000.
Chattogram’s bold move for Naim set the tone for the talent hierarchy. Towhid Hridoy (Tk 9.2 million) and Liton Das (Tk 7 million) became the second and third-costliest local signings, both landing with Rangpur.
The subdued interest in foreign players was striking. Piyush Chawla, once an Indian national team member, went unsold. Only three Sri Lankans managed to secure contracts—Dickwella, Mathews, and Shanaka.
With over 250 overseas cricketers listed in the next phase of the auction, the dynamics are expected to shift dramatically. Each team must secure at least two international players, with a base price of USD 35,000 for top-tier overseas names.
