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KKR release Andre Russell as big-name cuts set the tone for IPL mini auction

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Russell headlines big-name cuts ahead of mini auction [Cricbuzz]
Kolkata Knight Riders made the most striking calls ahead of the IPL mini-auction, headlined by the release of Andre Russell and Venkatesh Iyer from their IPL 2025 roster. Russell’s exit brings an end to a long and influential stint for the West Indian all-rounder, while Iyer was their most expensive (INR 23.75 Cr) pick at last year’s Jeddah mega auction.
KKR freed up both purse and overseas slots by also parting ways with Quinton de Kock, Anrich Nortje, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Moeen Ali and Spencer Johnson. With Mayank Markande traded to Mumbai Indians and Chetan Sakariya and Luvnith Sisodia also released, the three-time champions now enter the auction with a commanding purse of INR 64.3 crore and 13 slots (including six overseas) to fill.
Chennai Super Kings, who had a busy time in the trading window, also made quite a few releases and now have the second biggest purse (INR 43.4 Crore). They followed up the high-profile Ravindra Jadeja and Sam Curran trade by releasing Matheesha Pathirana and the New Zealand pair of Devon Conway and Rachin Ravindra, while Deepak Hooda, Rahul Tripathi and Vijay Shankar were also among their major releases. CSK can now fill up to nine slots, including four overseas.
With INR 25.5 Crore, Sunrisers Hyderabad have the third largest purse as they released eight players from their squad. Mohammed Shami, traded to Lucknow Super Giants, was their biggest move, while they also parted ways with Adam Zampa, Abhinav Manohar, Rahul Chahar and Wiaan Mulder among others.
LSG and Delhi Capitals ended up with purses of INR 22.9 Crore and 21.8 Crore respectively after their releases. LSG released eight players – apart from trading out Shardul Thakur, they let go David Miller, Akash Deep, Ravi Bishnoi and Shamar Joseph among others. Faf du Plessis and Mohit Sharma headlined DC’s seven releases, along with Jake Fraser-McGurk and Donovan Ferreria (traded to RR). Meanwhile, DC kept faith in their INR 10.75 Crore buy – T Natarajan – despite the left-arm seamer featuring in only two matches for them last season.
First-time IPL champions Royal Challengers Bengaluru ended up with a purse of INR 16.4 Crore at the end of the retention deadline, having released eight players, including Liam Livingstone, Tim Seifert, Lungi Ngidi and Mayank Agarwal. The IPL 2025 winners now have eight slots free, including two overseas.
Rajasthan Royals, who traded out Sanju Samson to CSK and Nitish Rana to DC, also released the Sri Lankan spin duo of Wanindu Hasaranga and Maheesh Theekshana. Kunal Singh Rathore, Akash Madhwal, Ashok Sharma, Fazalhaq Farooqi and Kumar Kartikeya were the other players released by RR, who now have a purse of INR 16.05 Cr with nine slots available (one overseas).
Former champions Gujarat Titans, apart from trading out Sherfane Rutherford to MI, released Gerald Coetzee, Dasun Shanaka, Mahipal Lomror, Karim Janat and Kulwant Khejroliya. This has left them with a purse of INR 12.9 Crore and five slots, including four overseas. Josh Inglis and Glenn Maxwell were the biggest releases from IPL 2025 runners-up Punjab Kings, who also let go Aaron Hardie, Kuldeep Sen and Praveen Dubey to secure a purse of INR 11.5 Crore, with four slots (two overseas) available for them.

Mumbai Indians, who roped in Rutherford, Thakur and Markande during the trading window, let go of nine players in total. Satyanaryana Raju and Vignesh Puthur, who had a couple of impressive outings in the 2025 season, were among the releases along with Reece Topley, Bevon Jacobs, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Lizaad Williams, Karn Sharma, KL Shrijith and Arjun Tendulkar (traded to LSG). They ended up with a purse of INR 2.75 Crore, least among all teams.

csk-have-bolstered-their-purse-by-releasing-pathirana

CSK have bolstered their purse by releasing Pathirana. [BCCI]

RETENTION, RELEASE, TRADE and PURSE

Kolkata Knight Riders

Released: 10
Retained: 12
Purse available: INR 64.3 CR
Slots available: 13 (6 overseas)
Players released: Andre Russell, Venkatesh Iyer, Moeen Ali, Quinton de Kock, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Andre Nortje, Spencer Johnson, Chetan Sakariya, Luvnith Sisodiya, Mayank Markande (traded to MI)
Current squad: Ajinkya Rahane, Angkrish Raghuvanshi, Anukul Roy, Harshit Rana, Manish Pandey, Ramandeep Singh, Rinku Singh, Rovman Powell, Sunil Narine, Umran Malik, Vaibhav Arora, Varun Chakravarthy

Chennai Super Kings

Released: 12
Retained: 15
Purse available: INR 43.4 CR
Slots available: 9 (4 overseas)
Players released: Matheesha Pathirana, Devon Conway, Rachin Ravindra, Deepak Hooda, Rahul Tripathi, Vijay Shankar, Vansh Bedi, Andre Siddarth, Shaikh Rasheed, Kamlesh Nagarkoti, Ravindra Jadeja (traded to RR), Sam Curran (traded to RR)
Current squad: Ruturaj Gaikwad, Ayush Mhatre, Dewald Brevis, MS Dhoni, Urvil Patel, Shivam Dube, Jamie Overton, Ramakrishna Ghosh, Noor Ahmad, Khaleel Ahmed, Anshul Kamboj, Gurjapneet Singh, Nathan Ellis, Shreyas Gopal, Mukesh Choudhary, Sanju Samson (traded in from RR)

Sunrisers Hyderabad

Released: 8
Retained: 15
Purse available: INR 25.5 CR
Slots available: 10 (2 overseas)
Players released: Abhinav Manohar, Atharva Taide, Sachin Baby, Wiaan Mulder, Simarjeet Singh, Rahul Chahar, Adam Zampa, Mohammed Shami (traded to LSG)
Current squad: Pat Cummins, Abhishek Sharma, Heinrich Klaasen, Travis Head, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Ishan Kishan, Harshal Patel, Jaydev Unadkat, Aniket Verma, Kamindu Mendis, Eshan Malinga, Brydon Carse, Harsh Dubey, Smaran Ravichandran, Zeeshan Ansari

Lucknow Super Giants

Released: 8
Retained: 17
Purse available: INR 22.95 CR
Slots available: 6 (4 overseas)
Players released: Aryan Juyal, David Miller, Shamar Joseph, Yuvraj Chaudhary, Rajvardhan Hangargekar, Akash Deep, Ravi Bishnoi, Shardul Thakur (traded to MI)
Current squad: Abdul Samad, Aiden Markram, Akash Singh, Arshin Kulkarni, Avesh Khan, Ayush Badoni, Digvesh Rathi, Himmat Singh, Manimaran Siddharth, Matthew Breetzke, Mayank Yadav, Mitchell Marsh, Mohsin Khan, Nicholas Pooran, Prince Yadav, Rishabh Pant, Shahbaz Ahmed, Arjun Tendulkar (traded in from MI) Mohammed Shami (traded in from SRH)

Delhi Capitals

Released: 7

Retained: 16
Purse available: INR 21.8 CR
Slots available: 8 (5 overseas)
Players released: Faf du Plessis, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Sediqullah Atal, Manvanth Kumar, Mohit Sharma, Darshan Nalkande, Donovan Ferreria (traded to RR)
Current squad: Abishek Porel, Ajay Mandal, Ashutosh Sharma, Axar Patel, Dushmantha Chameera, Karun Nair, KL Rahul, Kuldeep Yadav, Madhav Tiwari, Mitchell Starc, Sameer Rizvi, T Natarajan, Tripurana Vijay, Tristan Stubbs, Vipraj Nigam, Nitish Rana (traded in from RR)

Royal Challengers Bengaluru

Released: 8
Retained: 17
Purse available: INR 16.4 CR
Slots available: 8 (2 overseas)
Players released: Liam Livingstone, Swastik Chikara, Tim Seifert, Manoj Bhandage, Lungi Ngidi, Blessing Muzarabani, Mohit Rathee, Mayank Agarwal
Current squad: Rajat Patidar, Virat Kohli, Phil Salt, Krunal Pandya, Josh Hazlewood, Tim David, Jitesh Sharma, Devdutt Padikkal, Nuwan Thushara, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Jacob Bethell, Romario Shepherd, Suyash Sharma, Swapnil Singh, Yash Dayal, Abhinandan Singh, Rasikh Dar

Rajasthan Royals

Released: 9
Retained: 13
Purse available: INR 16.05 CR
Slots available: 9 (1 overseas)
Players released: Kunal Singh Rathore, Wanindu Hasaranga, Maheesh Theekshana, Fazalhaq Farooqi, Akash Madhwal, Ashok Sharma, Kumar Kartikeya, Sanju Samson (traded to CSK), Nitish Rana (traded to DC)
Current squad: Dhruv Jurel, Jofra Archer, Kwena Maphaka, Lhuan-dre Pretorius, Nandre Burger, Riyan Parag, Sandeep Sharma, Shimron Hetmyer, Shubham Dubey, Tushar Deshpande, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Yudhvir Singh, Ravindra Jadeja (traded in from CSK), Sam Curran (traded in from CSK)

Gujarat Titans

Released: 8
Retained: 20
Purse available: INR 12.90 CR
Slots available: 5 (4 overseas)
Players released: Dasun Shanaka, Mahipal Lomror, Karim Janat, Gerald Coetzee, Kulwant Khejroliya, Sherfane Rutherford (traded to MI)
Current squad: Anuj Rawat, Glenn Phillips, Gurnoor Brar, Ishant Sharma, Jayant Yadav, Jos Buttler, Kagiso Rabada, Kumar Kushagra, Manav Suthar, Mohammed Siraj, Arshad Khan, Nishant Sindhu, Prasidh Krishna, R Sai Kishore, Rahul Tewatia, Rashid Khan, B Sai Sudharsan, M Shahrukh Khan, Shubman Gill, Washington Sundar

Punjab Kings

Released: 5
Retained: 21
Purse available: INR 11.5 CR
Slots available: 4 (2 overseas)
Players released: Josh Inglis, Aaron Hardie, Glenn Maxwell, Kuldeep Sen, Praveen Dubey
Current squad: Arshdeep Singh, Azmatullah Omarzai, Harnoor Pannu, Harpreet Brar, Lockie Ferguson, Marco Jansen, Marcus Stoinis, Mitch Owen, Musheer Khan, Nehal Wadhera, Prabhsimran Singh, Priyansh Arya, Pyla Avinash, Shashank Singh, Shreyas Iyer, Suryansh Shedge, Vishnu Vinod, Vyshak Vijaykumar, Xavier Bartlett, Yash Thakur, Yuzvendra Chahal

Mumbai Indians

Released: 9
Retained: 17
Purse available: INR 2.75 CR
Slots available: 5 (1 overseas)
Players released: Satyanaryana Raju, Vignesh Puthur, Reece Topley, Bevon Jacobs, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Lizaad Williams, Karn Sharma, KL Shrijith, Arjun Tendulkar (traded to LSG)
Current squad: AM Ghazanfar, Ashwani Kumar, Corbin Bosch, Deepak Chahar, Hardik Pandya, Jasprit Bumrah, Mitchell Santner, Naman Dhir, Raghu Sharma, Raj Angad Bawa, Robin Minz, Rohit Sharma, Ryan Rickelton, Suryakumar Yadav, Tilak Varma, Trent Boult, Will Jacks, Shardul Thakur (traded in from LSG), Mayank Markande (traded in from KKR), Sherfane Rutherford (traded in from GT)
[Cricbuzz]


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Six US soldiers killed in Iranian strike on Kuwait base

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Six American soldiers were killed in an Iranian strike against a military facility in Kuwait on Sunday, the US has confirmed.

US Central Command originally said three soldiers died in the incident but officials confirmed on Monday that the death toll had doubled, after one person succumbed to their injuries and two more bodies were found in the rubble.

Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed a US bunker in Kuwait was hit after a missile was launched during Iran’s original retaliation evaded air defences.

The six deaths are the only fatalities confirmed by the US military since it launched a new war against Iran with Israel.

Hegseth said a “powerful weapon” struck a “tactical operations centre that was fortified”, without providing further details about the site’s location.

Three US military officials with direct knowledge of Iran’s attack told the BBC’s US partner CBS News that the service members were in a makeshift office space in Kuwait.

They questioned whether the building had been adequately fortified, telling CBS News a trailer was being used as an office, with 12ft (3.7m) steel-reinforced concrete barriers to shield it.

The US has a long-standing defence relationship with Kuwait, and more than 13,000 American soldiers are stationed in the Gulf nation.

Iran has responded to attacks against it by launching missiles at Gulf countries allied with the US. Bahrain, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Qatar have all also seen strikes.

Separately in Kuwait, the US confirmed three fighter jets were downed after what it described as an incident of “friendly fire” on Monday.

Footage showed the jets spiraling to the ground. The pilots involved all managed to eject and survived the incident.

Iran state media claimed the Iranian military had shot down the jets, without providing evidence.

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Israel attacks presidential office in Tehran as reported death toll in Iran rises to 787

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Israel says it has carried out new attacks on Iran’s “leadership compound” in Tehran, including the presidential office

One reporter inside Iran says ‘every part” of Teheran has been hit since Saturday, while new pictures show explosions in the east of the city.

The number of people killed since US-Israeli attacks began has reached 787,  the Red Crescent says.

Elsewhere, Israel says ground troops will ‘advance and seize aditional strategic areas in Lebanon in order to stop attacks on Israel

The US embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, has been hit by two drones, seemingly from Iran

And the gas price on international markets has risen again – up 30% at one point o Tuesday morning, after 50% increases on Monday

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump has again criticised Keir Starmer for initially denying access to British bases.

The US and Israel struck Iran on Saturday, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iran has retaliated with a wave of attacks across the region. On Monday, the US told Americans across the Middle East to “depart now”.

[BBC]

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Trump says Iran war projected to last 4 to 5 weeks, could go ‘far longer’

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US President Donald Trump speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, the United States [Aljazeera]

United States President Donald Trump has said the plan for the Iran war initially “projected four to five weeks”, adding the US military has the “capability to go far longer than that”.

Speaking on Monday from the White House, Trump outlined his administration’s justification for going to war against Iran alongside Israel, saying that Iran posed “grave threats” to the US, even as he again claimed that US strikes on Iran in June of last year led to the “obliteration of Iran’s nuclear programme”.

Trump also said that Iran’s ballistic missile programme was “growing rapidly and dramatically, and this posed a very clear, colossal threat to America and our forces stationed overseas”.

“The regime already had missiles capable of hitting Europe and our bases, both local and overseas, and would soon have had missiles capable of reaching our beautiful America,” Trump said, repeating a claim his administration has repeatedly made in the run-up to Saturday’s attack, for which US government officials have not provided any evidence.

The statements were significant, with Trump appearing to pivot from claims that Iran posed an immediate threat to the US. Instead, he characterised the Iranian government as potentially posing a longer-term threat.

“The purpose of this fast-growing missile programme was to shield their nuclear weapon development and make it extraordinarily difficult for anyone to stop them from making these – highly forbidden by us – nuclear weapons,” Trump said.

“An Iranian regime armed with long-range missiles and nuclear weapons would be an intolerable threat to the Middle East, but also to the American people,” Trump said.

“Our country itself would be under threat, and it was very nearly under threat,” Trump said.

Under both US domestic law and international law, attacks on a foreign country must be in response to an immediate threat. Under the US Constitution, only Congress can declare war, while the president can act unilaterally in response to an imminent threat.

Trump has released two video speeches since the US and Israel began their attacks, including saying in a recorded message released yesterday that Iran had waged a “war against civilisation”.

He also predicted there would likely be more US military personnel deaths after the Pentagon confirmed the first three members of the military killed in the Middle East on Sunday.

To date, at least 555 people have been killed in Iran, 13 have been killed in Lebanon, 10 killed in Israel, three killed in the United Arab Emirates, and two killed in Iraq, with Oman, Bahrain and Kuwait each reporting one death amid Iranian retaliations in the region.

On Monday, shortly after the Pentagon confirmed a fourth member of the US military had died, Trump did not give a clear timeline for the operations.

He said “Right from the beginning, we projected four to five weeks, but we have capability to go far longer than that.”

Trump added that the military had originally projected four weeks to “terminate the military leadership” of Iran.

To date, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and several other top officials, including the head of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), have been confirmed killed in US-Israeli strikes.

“We’re ahead of schedule there by a lot,” Trump said.

Trump spoke shortly after Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth took questions from reporters for the first time since the attacks began.

Hegseth appeared to respond to concerns from Trump’s own “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) movement about entering into a prolonged war.

Trump had vowed to end US interventionism during his presidential campaign, promising to focus on domestic needs over adventurism abroad.

“This is not Iraq. This is not endless,” Hegseth said.

“This operation is a clear, devastating, decisive mission. Destroy the missile threat, destroy the navy, no nukes,” he said.

“Israel has clear missions as well, for which we are grateful, capable partners,” he said, without defining Israel’s mission.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long called for the toppling of Iran’s government

Hegseth further vowed to fight the war “all on our terms, with maximum authorities, no stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars”.

[Aljazeera]

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