At times last season, there were signs that theChennai Super Kings(CSK) were ripping up their oft-successful blueprint of prioritizing experience over youth, owing to the replacements they picked and the players they subsequently released. And at the mini-auction on Tuesday, it became clear that that blueprint had indeed been ripped to shreds. CSK went hard for Cameron Green. Because, well, it was Cam Green. But they opted not to push their bid beyond Rs 25 crore. It felt a little counter-intuitive, both at that juncture and later when they did not raise the paddle at all for Liam Livingstone, but it soon made sense, with CSK breaking the bank to acquire youngstersKartik Sharma and Prashant Veer- both becoming the joint-most expensive uncapped players. Ever. If they slot into CSK’s first-choice side remains to be seen, although the splurge does indicate that that might be the case. Elsewhere, they also bought Akeal Hosein, a more experienced option in the Ravindra Jadeja mould. Matthew Short was also acquired for his base price of Rs 1.5 crore. But after a strange-looking auction (at least based on what CSK have done throughout their existence), they did spring to life in the accelerated round with two trademark buys. Matt Henry and Sarfaraz Khan were bought for their respective base prices, and could even slot into their playing eleven/twelve. The Rahul Chahar pick was a little more surprising. He does have a good record at Chepauk but the conditions have changed recently, and CSK, if Noor Ahmad is playing, would ideally want their second spinner to be a handy contributor with the bat. Zak Foulkes was CSK’s final buy, an all-rounder from New Zealand who can swing the new ball and is a decent batter lower down the order. Also Read:IPL 2026: Full list of squads of all 10 teams after mini auction in Abu Dhabi Batting firepower. Which is kind of ironic given CSK spent much of last season fielding questions if they had enough of it in their side. A major transformation has taken place since and if Kartik and Veer live up to their potential, and Sarfaraz continues his recent rich vein of T20 form, CSK will have a firecracker top eight (including MS Dhoni and perhaps excluding Urvil Patel). And if pitches in Chennai are indeed as flat as they were for most of last season, their young Indian core and batting firepower should hold them in good stead. What also stands out is the number of options CSK have this time out. In the 2025 iteration, they almost had too many like-for-like replacements, meaning even if they wanted to break out of the funk, they could not do so, until they brought in a host of reinforcements mid-way. CSK fans have seen better bowling attacks. That is no blot on the current one, but it does seem a little light and a touch short of experience. Nathan Ellis, who has suddenly become CSK’s pace spearhead, has barely played regular IPL cricket. Noor Ahmad is still young and a little erratic. Veer has never bowled a ball in the IPL, and Anshul Kamboj and Khaleel Ahmed are not dependable all-phase bowlers yet. They tried to rectify that with the signings of Chahar and Henry. The former, though, has been a shadow of his previous self, while the latter, despite his international pedigree, is an untested commodity in the IPL. The same could be said about seam-bowling all-rounders Foulkes and Jamie Overton. There are also a lot of moving parts, which is totally unlike CSK. They are betting on a lot of new players to hit the ground running and in the scenario that they do not, they could be forced to play catch-up, all over again. Well, they would have loved to pay lesser for both Kartik and Veer. Both youngsters crossed the Rs 14 crore threshold, and no uncapped player, before Tuesday, had ever gone for that many. That, of course, will bring added pressure, even if CSK are usually a side that likes to insulate its players from outside noise. There is a huge upside to Kartik, especially, but with Liam Livingstone eventually being sold for a sum lesser than what CSK paid for the youngster, the question arises if it would have been better for them to hold an interest in the England all-rounder. More so because that would have added more experience and given them that sixth/seventh bowling option from their top six. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, isn’t it? Also Read:IPL 2026 Auction: Full List of Most Expensive Capped and Uncapped Players 1 Ayush Mhatre, 2 Sanju Samson, 3 Ruturaj Gaikwad (c), 4 Sarfaraz Khan, 5 Dewald Brevis, 6 Shivam Dube, 7 MS Dhoni (wk), 8 Prashant Veer, 9 Noor Ahmad, 10 Matt Henry, 11 Khaleel Ahmed, 12 Nathan Ellis Akeal Hosein, Prashant Veer, Kartik Sharma, Matthew Short, Sarfaraz Khan, Matt Henry, Zak Foulkes, Aman Khan, Rahul Chahar Ruturaj Gaikwad (c), Sanju Samson, Ayush Mhatre, Dewald Brevis, Shivam Dube, Kartik Sharma, MS Dhoni (wk), Prashant Veer, Noor Ahmad, Anshul Kamboj, Khaleel Ahmed, Nathan Ellis, Gurjapneet Singh, Akeal Hosein, Matthew Short, Jamie Overton, Aman Khan, Ramakrishna Ghosh, Urvil Patel, Mukesh Choudhary, Shreyas Gopal, Sarfaraz Khan, Matt Henry, Zak Foulkes, Rahul Chahar Jasprit Bumrah was rested for fifth Test against England at The Oval Workload management was believed to be the reason behind Bumrah's absence The pacer, however, reportedly has a knee injury, a BCCI official claimed in a report. 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CSK Rips Up Their Blueprint: Prioritizing Youth Over Experience at Mini-Auction
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