The Asian Age

Indianapol­is aims to become centre for US cricket

- Rick Callahan

Indianapol­is: The Midwestern city best known for its basketball and auto racing is gearing up for cricket, a game most Americans know only from British films or by surfing through internatio­nal sports channels. Indianapol­is is spending $ 6 million to equip one of its parks with a premier cricket pitch, and space for Gaelic football, rugby, hurling and other sports mainly popular overseas. Mayor Greg Ballard hopes his World Sports Park project will bring internatio­nal exposure to Indiana’s capital and help local companies attract talented overseas workers by offering them a home for their favourite games.

“I don’t think there’s any city that’s trying to put all these pieces together, but there’s always a firstmover advantage for those who try to do it right,” he said. “These are global sports and they’ll give us more visibility in the global marketplac­e.” Cities across the country are jockeying for any advantage they can find to boost economic developmen­t, and sports is an easy target. The NBA, NFL and Major League Baseball pump millions into local economies in the cities that host them. But can a sport that most Americans are unfamiliar with have the same payoff? It’s a gamble, said Bob Dorfman, a sports marketing expert at San Francisco’s Baker Street Advertisin­g. “How do you sell it to a public who really doesn’t understand it? To me cricket is a fairly mystifying sport,” Dorfman said. “It takes a lot to really figure it out.” That hasn’t always been the case. The British brought cricket to the American colonies in the early 1700s.

And the game enjoyed a strong following until baseball, an offshoot of cricket, became the nation’s favoured game after the Civil War. Ballard, a Republican in his second term, isn’t daunted. Indianapol­is has already signed a three- year deal to host a US Amateur cricket tournament and championsh­ip, starting in August 2014. That tournament will be the first such event in the US since 2011. “When people around the world think of cricket, I want them to think of Indianapol­is,” he told media in India during a trade visit in April. Whether Indianapol­is residents buy in remains to be seen. Local Democrats have criticised Ballard for moving ahead with the park upgrade at a time when the city faces a $ 50 million budget deficit. The project’s funding is coming from a $ 425 million fund set aside for infrastruc­ture upgrades after the city sold its water and sewer utilities. Democratic Councilman William Oliver says the money would have been better spent on new sidewalks and other projects that would have benefited a wider spectrum of residents. “You can shoot craps if you’ve got the money to wager a bet, but we don’t have the money,” Oliver said. Cricket supporters insist Ballard’s vision can become a reality. Darren Beazley, the chief executive of the United States of America Cricket Associatio­n, said there are currently 50 cricket leagues with 1,108 teams in the US. And that about 30,000 Americans, mostly immigrants from former British colonies, play cricket, which he said is the world’s second- most popular sport after football. Beazley said his Florida- based group hopes to double the nation’s pool of cricketers within five years, in part by demonstrat­ing the sport to schoolchil­dren to get them hooked, much as football was popularise­d a few decades ago. “How do we get the average American kid to say, ‘ You know what, this is a good, fun, safe game. I love it and I want my friends to play’?

That’s the challenge,” he said. Jatin Patel, president of the Indiana Youth Cricket Associatio­n, said students in about 240 Indiana schools have been shown the basics of the sport since his Indianapol­is- based group began an outreach program in 2010. Patel, who moved to the US from India in 1986, said the organisati­on is also training teachers as cricket coaches, with about 80 certified to date. He said some schools have added after- school cricket programmes, drawing more youngsters into the game. “They need to learn this game, that’s all it takes. They’ll get used to it once they see teams playing in their backyard, their neighbourh­oods or their school,” Patel said. Indianapol­is isn’t the first US city to try to tap into the sport’s overseas popularity. Lauderhill, Florida, opened a $ 5 million cricket stadium in 2007 that’s the only US cricket venue certified by the Internatio­nal Cricket Council. Indianapol­is hopes the cricket pitch it’s building will become the nation’s second certified by the Dubai- based group.

Although Lauderhill’s venue has attracted internatio­nal games, it’s been plagued by a lack of income and marquee events. Lauderhill Mayor Richard Kaplan said his South Florida city is still working to land long- term agreements for internatio­nal cricket matches, such as a game it hosted last year between the West Indies and New Zealand that he said was seen by a global television audience of about 1 billion people. “If your goal is to try and connect with many parts of this world for potential commerce, trade and tourism, that’s a huge market to go after,” he said.

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