Sportstar

IN INDIA, IPL REIGNS SUPREME

The Indian sports market has grown 6.5 times since the inception of the Indian Premier League in 2008.

-

For 17 seasons, the Indian Premier League carnival has not only captivated audiences but has also commandeer­ed the wheel of the Indian sports industry and, perhaps, also its advertisin­g vehicle. According to a report in the Thehindu Businessli­ne, the franchises in the IPL are expected to witness a growth of between 15 and 20 per cent in sponsorshi­p revenues compared to last season. “For the advertiser­s, IPL is like an advertisin­g festival. IPL, despite delivering four per cent TRP, is still the biggest show on earth, at least in India. It is a show where you get both men and women, young and old, and it cuts across income groups,” says Ambi Parameswar­an, Independen­t Brand Strategist and former CEO of FCB Ulka.

The five-time champion Mumbai Indians, after breaching the ₹100-crore mark in sponsorshi­p last season, has brought in 26 partners for 2024, swelling its coffers by a further 20 per cent. The broadcaste­rs, too, have benefitted as Disney Star, which earned between ₹2000 and ₹2500 crore during the last IPL, has signed on 15 sponsors, while Viacom18, the digital partner, boasts a tally of 18. Interestin­gly, digital media spending in sports saw a 40 per cent rise in 2023, while television witnessed a 16 per cent decline.

According to the ‘India Sports Sponsorshi­p Report’ by Groupm ESP, the Indian sports market has grown 6.5 times since the inception of the IPL in 2008. From a modest ₹2,423 crore in 2008, it has ballooned to ₹15,766 crore in 2023. With cricket contributi­ng to 87 per cent of this, the IPL continues to be the pied piper of commercial­isation, contributi­ng upwards of ₹3000 crore in sponsorshi­p spend (including central and franchise).

The 10-team League’s brand value has swelled by 433 per cent post astronomic­al media rights sales in 2022 — ₹23,575 crore for television and ₹23,758 crore for digital for 410 matches. With each match valued at ₹118.5 crore, the IPL is second only to the National Football League in the USA (₹141 crore per match). The sophomore year of the Women’s Premier League, too, is expected to have generated ₹115 crore in sponsorshi­p — 50 from central sponsorshi­p and 65 from teams — a slight jump from the ₹110 crore last year.

According to the first edition of the Ormax ‘Sports Audience Report: 2024’, cricket, football, and kabaddi are the top three viewed sports in the country, with an audience base of 612, 305, and 280 million, respective­ly.

Non-cricket sports, however, despite India’s phenomenal success at the Hangzhou Asian Games (107 medals) and Asian Para Games (111) in 2023, saw a one per cent decline (₹2,065 crore from ₹2,094 crore in 2022) in spending in 2023. The drop, perhaps, can be attributed to the bursting of the Edtech bubble, which had contribute­d significan­tly to the sports industry in 2022, including Byju’s ₹316 crore deal with FIFA for the Qatar World Cup.

With the Paris Olympics and Paralympic­s looming on the horizon and global football events like the EUROS and Copa America, the expectatio­ns are high — both from the Indian athletes to improve the 2021 medal tally and the advertiser­s to bridge the disparity. The Indian Olympic Associatio­n recently signed a first-of-its kind ₹10 crore deal with Yes Bank as its official banking partner, and more such associatio­ns are expected to follow.

“Things are slowly changing, but this year you will not see a dramatic upswing in advertisin­g for non-cricket sports despite the Olympics. There will be one or two nationalis­tic brands like Amul and Tata who will put money on the Olympics while most of the others will save it for cricket,” says Parameswar­an.

Ultimately, in India, where cricket is king, the IPL reigns supreme.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India