The Asian Age

India’s biggest cricket festival kicks off

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Over the past few weeks, I’ve been asked frequently who the likely winners of the IPL this season will be, but have desisted from giving any answer. Anybody claiming powers of prescience in forecastin­g what will happen in T20 cricket is pulling a fast one. The format is simply too unpredicta­ble.

I usually turn such inquiry on its head and say the real winner is the IPL itself. When it started in 2008, skeptics didn’t give it too many years to survive. But in the decade of its existence, it’s only become richer and stronger.

The first aspect does not need too much explaining. A large part of the answer comes from the whopping price paid for the league’s media rights ( five years) in last year’s auction itself: approxiama­tely ` 16,347 crore!

This quashed all speculatio­n that the IPL was on the wane. Such a jaw- dropping bid obviously factors in the monetisati­on potential of the IPL by Star India that bagged the media rights. their stride because the talent that is available is still extraordin­ary. ( Players from Pakistan, admitted to the league initially, are still out of bounds, but that’s a different story.)

Even when corruption emerged at the core in 2013, invoking strictures from the Supreme Court and the teams from Chennai and Rajasthan being banned, the popularity of the league did not diminish a whit.

This extraordin­ary resilience could be attributed to the manic passion for cricket in India coupled with the frenetic pace of T20 cricket which has actually found worldwide acceptance, the compunctio­ns of purists notwithsta­nding.

The IPL’s massive success has triggered off similar leagues in other countries, but none has been able to match its heft in either popularity or finances. This is in no small way due to the large numbers of Indian fans as well as the health of the Indian economy, but even so.

The biggest fear about the IPL — and this was most pronounced in India — was that it would have a deleteriou­s effect on the skills of players, existing and upcoming, and what impact it would have on the future of Indian cricket.

If results are anything to go by, these fears have proved to be completely unfounded. Almost every player representi­ng India in Tests or limited overs cricket, is part of the IPL, the notable exception being Cheteshwar Pujara, and even he would love to be in the thick of things.

More pertinentl­y, there is no evidence of erosion in skills of players, old and young, because they play the IPL. If anything, the league ( and T20 cricket) seems to have enhanced their match- winning capacities.

There can be no tangible proof of this, but that India have been the most consistent­ly performing side in all formats in the last decade and is currently ranked no. 1 in Tests and ODIs and no. 3 in T20is tells its own story.

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