Toronto Star

League delivers unorthodox pitch for Toronto market

Sport’s body gives blessing for Twenty20 league but it faces challenges getting off the ground

- FARAZ SARWAT

If Cricket Canada is to be believed, Toronto could see the advent of a profession­al cricket league this summer with teams made up of foreign pros and local cricket talent.

A media release from Cricket Canada in early December promised this and more. Nearly three months later, however, official details remain scarce.

Cricket Canada has signed a memorandum of understand­ing with an Indian company called Mercuri to develop a Twenty20 cricket league, with a final agreement yet to be concluded.

Cricket Canada’s website states that Mercuri has met all aspects of Cricket Canada’s sanctionin­g policy. Until recently on its website, Mercuri listed Sports Management among its services and stated: “We own, produce and manage many of the world’s most prestigiou­s sporting events and offer unique hospitalit­y and sponsorshi­p opportunit­ies that help companies build global brands.”

But there was no specific informatio­n of any sporting events and the descriptio­n no longer appears on Mercuri’s website, nor does any mention of Sports Management.

Cricket Canada president Ranjit Saini, the driving force behind the project, says he is aware of other successful cricket ventures that Mercuri has been involved in, but doesn’t see it as his place to talk about them. Saini reiterates that Cricket Canada has done its due diligence into its new partner and is confident that Mercuri will help usher in a new era for Canadian cricket.

Cricket Canada’s release stated the league would be functionin­g in 2018. That plan seems overly ambitious now, with no actual teams, contracted players, a settled venue to play in, or even a name for the league — referred to in the statement as “Twenty20 Major League Cricket,” which now seems to have lost traction.

Saini concedes that it could be difficult for the as-yet-unnamed league to be fully functionin­g by the summer, but he does promise that there will be “some event” in 2018 that will herald what is to come.

Mohammed Shaikh, the president of the Toronto and District Cricket Associatio­n, who is also a director at Cricket Canada, understand­s the skepticism around the league at this point, but says that it’s real and it’s coming. “We will be having a cricket festival in June. Work is underway to hold a player draft in Dubai shortly.” Shaikh says that Cricket Canada has already received some sponsorshi­p funds and that according to an agreement signed in New York a week ago, Cricket Canada is to receive around $500,000 from Mercuri by the end of this month — a huge sum in the context of Canadian cricket.

Saini realizes that a cricket league in Canada cannot compete with the lucrative Indian Premier League (IPL) or Australia’s Big Bash League (BBL) and will need to be different.

How it will be different is not yet clear, but the nascent plan seems to be to make use of Canada’s — and particular­ly Toronto’s — multicultu­ral diversity and have teams in the league that are global in their affinity.

“Our league has to have a global focus,” said Saini. “There will be six teams and each team will have its local and global supporters. We will turn our event into a global event. There’s no better place than Canada for a tournament like that. This will be a tourism event, too. South Asians who travel to Switzerlan­d or Australia can come to Canada in the summer and watch cricket.”

Saini says there has always been interest from overseas in Canada’s cricket market, but the rub lies in what Cricket Canada sees as the market’s worth compared to the perception of outsiders. In a potential profession­al cricket league based out of the United States or elsewhere, Canada is seen as a one-franchise country, with a team in Toronto.

“We counter that view by pointing out that Toronto is actually the only place in North America where you’ll get a full house or close to a full house consistent­ly for a cricket match,” he says.

Saini cites the example of the Twenty20 matches played between India and the West Indies in Florida in August 2016. He attended both matches and was unimpresse­d by the attendance.

“The first match was half-full and the ground was two-thirds empty for the second match. If India and the West Indies can’t fill a 15,000-capacity venue in the U.S., then who will?”

“We will turn our event into a global event. There’s no better place than Canada for a tournament like that.” RANJIT SAINI PRESIDENT, CRICKET CANADA

In 2008, the Maple Leaf Cricket Club ground at King City hosted a quadrangul­ar tournament with Canada competing against the likes of Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe. The temporary stands and video screens transforme­d the out-of-the-way club cricket ground into something resembling a cricket stadium. Saini takes inspiratio­n from that tournament 10 years ago toward what could be possible if the pieces all line up.

Canada still lacks a cricket stadium and Saini says investors understand that the first few seasons of the league will need to be played in temporary quarters. It is likely the Maple Leaf club will again be pressed into service, at least in the short term. Shaikh says the goal is to eventually have a stadium in the GTA that cricket can share with other sports.

Cricket Canada has no expectatio­ns for the ICC to help with any of this or otherwise step in to boost cricket in this country, beyond the funding they already provide. Saini has no complaints about the ICC and is quick to say that Cricket Canada gets exactly what it is entitled to based on its performanc­e and ranking.

As ambitious and fraught with obstacles as the potential cricket league in Toronto may seem, its conception is entirely in keeping with Cricket Canada’s responsibi­lity to grow the sport and make it more visible.

And while there is no ill feeling about the ICC’s interest lying across the border these days, Saini thinks the league in Toronto will make one thing clear: “Cricket in the Americas will always be Canada’s game.”

 ?? RENÉ JOHNSON/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? In 2008, the Maple Leaf Cricket Club ground in King City hosted a tournament featuring Sri Lanka (shown here vs. Canada), Pakistan and Zimbabwe.
RENÉ JOHNSON/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO In 2008, the Maple Leaf Cricket Club ground in King City hosted a tournament featuring Sri Lanka (shown here vs. Canada), Pakistan and Zimbabwe.

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