The Plunket Shield is worth $1,750, the Ford Trophy/Hallyburton Johnstone Shield is worth $800, the Super Smash is for $575, and the ODIs and T20Is are worth $4,000 and $2,500, respectively. Meanwhile, in India, there is a considerable income discrepancy between male and female players. Male Classification A+ players get Rs 7 crore per year, whereas female cricketers earn only Rs 50 lakh.
Under contract White Ferns may now expect to earn between $142,000 and $163,000 each game, which includes match money and a retainer. It was far superior to their former arrangement. Each Twenty20 match is $2500, while each One Day International is $4000.
1. MG Bracewell
Michael Bracewell is a Wellington cricketer from New Zealand. He is the cousin of current international player Doug Bracewell and the nephew of former Test players Brendon and John Bracewell. In Dunedin, he attended Kavanagh College.
2. D cleaver
Dane Cleaver is a Central Districts cricketer from New Zealand. In July 2022, he made his international debut for the New Zealand cricket team. He is New Zealand captain Kane Williamson’s cousin.
3. CJ Bowes
Chad Jayson Bowes is a South African cricketer who led the South African Under-19 team and played for KwaZulu-Natal in the domestic league. Chad joined the Sydenham Cricket Club in Christchurch, New Zealand, in October 2015, coached by former Black Cap Chris Harris.
4. CD Fletcher
Fletcher was picked to New Zealand’s Under-19 team in 2012, together with future Black Caps Will Young, Ish Sodhi, and Jacob Duffy. The squad travelled to Australia for the Under-19 World Cup as well as a quadrangular series against England, India, and the hosts. In the quarter-finals, he struck 49 in a last-ball triumph over the West Indies.
5. Finn Allen
On 3 January 2017, Allen made his Twenty20 debut for Auckland in the 2016-17 Super Smash. Prior to his Twenty20 debut, he was nominated to New Zealand’s Under-19 Cricket World Cup team in 2016. Allen was picked to New Zealand’s Under-19 Cricket World Cup team in December 2017. On the first day of the event, he got the tournament’s first century, 115 not out against the West Indies.
6.Tom Bruce
Tom Bruce, a big-hitting batsman with a good eye and a clean swing, made an impression for Central Districts in the 2015-16 Super Smash, scoring 223 runs at a strike rate of 140.25. Although it was his first senior T20 event, only Mahela Jayawardene scored more runs for the squad.
Bruce prefers classic hitting zones: he’s been known to cut balls over point and score significantly between square leg and long-on, but it doesn’t mean his cricket is restricted to slogs. His batting is also innovative, as he is capable of hitting the sweep shot against quicks at his finest form.
7. C de Grandhomme
Colin de Grandhomme, a muscular, broad-shouldered batsman and a disciplined medium-pace bowler, moved to Auckland from Zimbabwe in 2006, finally making his way into New Zealand’s representative teams. His first international appearance came, unsurprisingly, in the T20 format. De Grandhomme made his debut against his home Zimbabwe in 2012 after establishing a reputation as a big hitter in New Zealand’s local T20 league. He did not impress enough to preserve his position on that occasion, but he continued to thrive on the home circuit.
8. TL Seifert
Tim Seifert (born December 14, 1994) is a New Zealand cricketer. He was a member of New Zealand’s squad for the 2014 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup and made his international debut in February 2018.
9. Greg Hay
After hitting 98 on his first-class debut, he continued to score runs for the Stags, scoring 55 on his List A debut. He now plays for the San Diego Surf Riders in Minor League Cricket. With 786 runs in nine matches, he was Central Districts’ best run-scorer in the 2017-18 Plunket Shield season.
10. HD Rutherford
Hamish Rutherford, the son of former New Zealand captain Ken, made an early impression on the international arena when he struck 171 against England in his maiden Test in Dunedin. A good opening batsman, Hamish bats left-handed, unlike his father, and had a Test debut that contrasted sharply with Ken’s – Ken had a pair on Test debut, against West Indies in 1985, and made 12 runs in seven innings in that series.