• Maratha Arabians' Chris Lynn cracked four fifties in eight matches in the Abu Dhabi T10. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    Maratha Arabians' Chris Lynn cracked four fifties in eight matches in the Abu Dhabi T10. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • Mohammad Shahzad of Deccan Gladiators lit up the tournament with his unique brand of cricket. Pawan Singh / The National
    Mohammad Shahzad of Deccan Gladiators lit up the tournament with his unique brand of cricket. Pawan Singh / The National
  • Shane Watson of Deccan Gladiators was the second highest run-getter in the inaugural edition of the Abu Dhabi T10. Pawan Singh / The National
    Shane Watson of Deccan Gladiators was the second highest run-getter in the inaugural edition of the Abu Dhabi T10. Pawan Singh / The National
  • Bangla Tigers' Andre Fletcher has now amassed more than 500 runs in three editions of the T10 league. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    Bangla Tigers' Andre Fletcher has now amassed more than 500 runs in three editions of the T10 league. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • Team Abu Dhabi's Luke Wright was the second highest scorer in the Abu Dhabi T10 league phase. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    Team Abu Dhabi's Luke Wright was the second highest scorer in the Abu Dhabi T10 league phase. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • Maratha Arabians' Chadwick Walton, right, starred with the bat and gloves in the Abu Dhabi T10 final. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    Maratha Arabians' Chadwick Walton, right, starred with the bat and gloves in the Abu Dhabi T10 final. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • File image of Chris Jordan, who performed admirably for Qalandars in the Abu Dhabi T10. AFP
    File image of Chris Jordan, who performed admirably for Qalandars in the Abu Dhabi T10. AFP
  • Maratha Arabians' Lasith Malinga is still going strong at the age 36. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    Maratha Arabians' Lasith Malinga is still going strong at the age 36. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • Bangla Tigers' Afghan leg-spinner Qais Ahmed was brilliant with the ball and in the field. Satish Kumar for The National
    Bangla Tigers' Afghan leg-spinner Qais Ahmed was brilliant with the ball and in the field. Satish Kumar for The National
  • File photo of Seekkuge Prasanna, who delivered for Qalandars. CPL T20/Getty Images
    File photo of Seekkuge Prasanna, who delivered for Qalandars. CPL T20/Getty Images
  • Maratha Arabians' UAE bowler Shiraz Ahmed was a revelation in Abu Dhabi T10. Pawan Singh / The National
    Maratha Arabians' UAE bowler Shiraz Ahmed was a revelation in Abu Dhabi T10. Pawan Singh / The National

UAE's Shiraz Ahmed and Chris Lynn in our Abu Dhabi T10 team of the tournament


Paul Radley
  • English
  • Arabic

Chris Lynn was named player of the tournament after his Maratha Arabians took the Abu Dhabi T10 title with a win over Deccan Gladiators on Sunday night.

The Australian opener was unquestionably the dominant figure in the 10-day tournament at the Zayed Cricket Stadium, but he was not the only one who caught the eye. Here is our team of the tournament.

1. Chris Lynn (Maratha Arabians)

Peerless in this competition, as he consistently threatened the century mark. Bowlers must fear for their physical safety when he is at the other end.

2. Mohammad Shahzad (Deccan Gladiators)

The burly Afghan faces his fair share of troubles, yet still plays the game with such joie de vivre. Carefree – so much so that he even forgot the name of the team he was playing for.

3. Shane Watson (Deccan Gladiators)

He is 38 now, and a long time out of international cricket, yet remains so reliable. He made 75 not out against Northern Warriors in the time it took his fellow batsmen to score 19.

4. Andre Fletcher (Bangla Tigers)

The most consistently destructive batsman in the short history of 10-over cricket. His 186-run haul this time took him to an aggregate of 522 from the three seasons of T10.

5. Luke Wright (Team Abu Dhabi)

The Englishman scored the second most runs – after Lynn – of any batsman in the group stage, while opening for Team Abu Dhabi. But his side still went out.

6. Chadwick Walton (Maratha Arabians)

Could have a future as a football-freestyler, judged on his warm ups at this tournament. Given Lynn’s excellence, he was scarcely required until the final – at which point he stole the show with his glovework and batting.

7. Chris Jordan (Qalandars)

The heartbeat of a Qalandars side that was more or less thrown together on the eve of the tournament. He was their go-to bowler in the business overs at the end of games.

8. Lasith Malinga (Maratha Arabians)

Can you think of a seam bowler who would be better suited to T10 than Malinga? Possibly Jasprit Bumrah, but Malinga’s yorkers are seldom bettered anywhere else.

9. Qais Ahmed (Bangla Tigers)

The 19-year-old Afghan leggie is some talent. He is an athletic fielder, and a gifted spinner – with an edge, too, as he showed when he bounced a helmet-less Andre Russell.

10. Seekkuge Prasanna (Qalandars)

Nobody seemed to enjoy T10 as much as this Sri Lankan leg-spinner. He held fine catches and did 'The Dab' dance move. He took wickets and did 'The Floss'. He was a joy to watch.

11. Shiraz Ahmed (Maratha Arabians, UAE)

Unknown beyond a few within UAE cricket before this tournament, yet emerged as one of the stars for his superb left-arm fast bowling. Earned praise from Andy Flower, Dwayne Bravo and Dawid Malan.