“I love playing at The Oval and we had a great time last year,” he says. “But I was picked up low in the draft [in 2019], and even though I went up a couple of spots [in the retentions before 2021], I still felt like I wanted to bat a bit higher and get up the order. I just felt like there was an opportunity to get a high spot in the draft and batting up the order might come with that. I looked at the Oval line-up and thought I wasn’t really going to get to bat higher than No. 5.”I loved batting in the middle-order in the Big Bash. You don’t necessarily sit at the top of the runs but in terms of impact, I felt like it couldn’t have gone much better. I’d love to open for obvious reasons – everyone would – but I think my real value lies in the middle order, in terms of handling pressure. That’s where I come into my own.”While Evans was scoring runs in Australia, Hain was in Bangladesh, spending three weeks working on his game against spin as a back-up overseas player for Fortune Barishal in the BPL. Hain was overlooked in the initial Hundred draft in 2019, his career strike rate of 124.41 counting against him, and has used that snub as the catalyst for improvement in the last two seasons.”The decision got made for me and I realised I couldn’t rest on my laurels,” Hain says. “I’ve felt like I’ve always had the shots but I’ve had to really grasp a change in mindset. Either you go with the times or you get left behind.”Across the last two Blast seasons, Hain has averaged 45.46 while striking at 139.18. “I hope there’s a sense of versatility there,” he adds. “I’ve found a lot of my success at No. 4 once I worked out a gameplan there for each scenario. It’s quite a tricky position because you’ve got to be versatile in your method. I feel like my game is able to adapt to any scenario and that’s one of my main selling points.”There are several other options for teams looking to plug that gap. Overseas players like David Miller, Colin Munro and Rilee Rossouw are expected to be available for the vast majority of the season, while Ian Cockbain, Tom Kohler-Cadmore, Delray Rawlins and Adam Hose all have experience in the middle order. Previous drafts have made one thing clear: teams will spring one or two surprises along the way.

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