The Franchise That Built Its Powerplay First
The Question Nobody Asked
MLC's all-time powerplay leaderboard has three names at the top. Two of them play for the same team. Is that luck, scouting, or franchise philosophy?
What the Data Says
MLC all-time powerplay batting leaders (minimum 30 powerplay balls, 2023–2025, 75 matches):
| Rank | Batter | Team | Powerplay SR | Balls |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | MJ Owen | Washington Freedom | 194.3 | 123 |
| 2 | FH Allen | San Francisco Unicorns | 188.0 | 225 |
| 3 | R Ravindra | Washington Freedom | 187.6 | 129 |
Dataset: CricketStudio, Cricsheet CC BY 3.0. MLC 2023–2025. Floor: ≥30 powerplay balls.
Washington Freedom hold two of the top three spots. Owen leads at 194.3 SR from 123 balls. Ravindra ranks third at 187.6 SR from 129 balls. Between them, San Francisco's FH Allen — 188.0 SR from 225 balls (the largest powerplay sample in MLC history).
Washington's combined powerplay contribution from just these two players: 252 balls at an average of ~191 SR. That's more than the entire qualifying samples of most teams' powerplay batters combined.
The Wow
Three seasons of MLC produced exactly one instance of a franchise placing two players in the top three of the all-time powerplay leaderboard. It happened with Washington Freedom.
This is not just a statistical quirk. It reflects how powerplay batting works in T20 cricket: opening partnerships are multiplicative. If you have one elite powerplay batter, you have an advantage in 6 overs per match. If you have two, and they both bat in the powerplay — which opening batters do — you have a structural edge that compounds across a season.
Washington built that edge deliberately. Owen and Ravindra are not accident arrivals; they're international batters selected with powerplay intent.
What It Doesn't Say
This story does not say Washington Freedom is the best team in MLC. Franchise success depends on bowling, death batting, field placements, and dozens of variables beyond the powerplay.
It does not say Allen is less valuable because he plays for a different team — his 225 balls is MLC's largest powerplay sample and his 188.0 SR is elite.
It does not say two good powerplay batters guarantee a good powerplay — they also need to survive the new ball, which requires some luck and some judgement beyond raw SR.
The sample is 75 total MLC matches across 3 seasons. Fewer than one IPL season. Treat the rankings as directional, not definitive — Owen's 123 balls is above the ≥30 floor, but is smaller than Suryavanshi's 223 IPL powerplay balls for comparison.