Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

IPL teams to make profits for 1st time

- Vidhi Choudhary letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The eight teams of the Indian Premier League (IPL) will each generate at least ₹200 crore in revenue and turn a tidy profit at the end of the 11th edition of the T20 tournament — a first in the history of the decade-old Twenty20 league — powered by their share of income from media rights.

Officials at the Board of Control for Cricket (BCCI) and the owners of some the teams confirmed that each team (and some of the eight have never made profits in the past 10 years) will earn a profit of at least ₹75 crore this season. Some teams could generate as much as ₹100-125 crore in profit.

It has been known for some time now that this year will be profitable for the eight teams in the league, but it is only now that the exact magnitude of their profitabil­ity is becoming clear.

“It’s an absolute blessing. Whether they finish first or last, all teams will be financiall­y stable this season. The cash flows for all teams will improve immensely; some of them have been cash strapped for 10 years. The extra money could also help them to expand their sports business,” said the former head of an IPL franchise on condition of anonymity.

Behind the turn of fortunes is a steep rise in the share the teams get of the so-called central revenue from the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI). This includes revenue from media and title rights, and league sponsors.

The teams get 40% of this.

This amount will increase this year from ₹65 crore to ₹200-250 crore, largely on the back of the ₹16,347.5 crore that Star India will pay BCCI over the next five years for Indian and global media rights to IPL, and the ₹2,199 crore Vivo will pay over the next five years for title rights.

In addition, teams also have their own sponsors (who add another ₹25-30 crore to each team), and share of gate receipts (₹10-15 crore).

On the cost side, each IPL team has to give a 20% share of revenue starting this year to BCCI (this replaces the franchise fee), pay local cricket associatio­ns for use of facilities, account for salaries to players and support staff, and spend on advertisin­g and promotion.

The net equation will still be a happy one for the teams.

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