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Robin Uthappa reveals the dark side of IPL auctions
By SMCS - Feb 22, 2022 2:00 pm
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Indian Premier League has so far made many player’s life. However, the IPL auctions can turn out to be a big deal for a few, as well as, could prove demotivating as well. Many players who go unsold face a tough time dealing with rejections also. And, Chennai Super Kings batsman Robin Uthappa, who was acquired for ₹2 crores, said that an auction system certainly does not help players’ mental well-being.

Robin Uthappa

“Playing for a team like CSK was something I desired, it was one of my only prayers: let’s get back to CSK. My family, even my son, prayed for that, which is special for me. I’m happy to be back in a place where there’s a sense of security and a sense of respect. There’s a backing that’s given which makes me feel like I can do anything,” Uthappa told veteran sports journalist Meha Bhardwaj Alter in an interview with News9.

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“The auction feels like an examination which you have written a long time ago, and you’re just awaiting the results. You feel like cattle (commodity), to be honest,” he said. “It’s not the most pleasing feeling, and I think that’s the thing about cricket, especially in India… everything about you is there for the world to consume and then judge and express their opinions about it. Having an opinion about performances is one thing, but having an opinion on how much you get sold for is quite something else.”

uthappa dhoni
Robin Uthappa and MS Dhoni

Robin Uthappa again stated: “You can’t imagine what the guys who don’t get sold go through. It cannot be pleasant. My heart goes out to guys who have been there for a long time and then miss out and don’t get picked. It can be defeating sometimes. Suddenly your value as a cricketer becomes about how much somebody is willing to spend on you, and it’s so haphazard… there is no method to the madness,”

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“People have tried their best to kind of grapple around it for the last 15 years, and I don’t know if they have a clue because if you speak to a lot of the people who have been there at the auction, they’ll say ‘you know it’s so random… if you’d come later you’d probably have made more money… if you’d come earlier there’d have been enough money so you’d have made more’. I really hope for the sake of the sanity of everybody that this goes into a draft system where it is more respectful,” Robin Uthappa concluded.