Business Day

IPL a success despite scandals

- ABHAYA SRIVASTAVA New Delhi

THE scandal-prone Indian Premier League remains cricket’s most divisive tournament, but some thrilling action in front of packed houses has put doubts over its future to rest.

THE scandal-prone Indian Premier League (IPL) remains cricket’s most divisive tournament, but some thrilling action in front of packed houses has put immediate doubts over its future to rest.

When the gawdy Twenty20 event’s fifth edition started last month, flagging crowds, signs of “cricket fatigue” among India’s public, and poor publicity raised questions about the tournament.

However, by the time Kolkata Knight Riders beat the Chennai Super Kings to claim the title on Sunday, and despite damaging spot-fixing claims and a string of lurid headlines, the IPL had been hailed as a success.

“The fifth edition started under a cloud of controvers­ies and crowd backlash, but apprehensi­ons were soon swept aside as some command performanc­es on the field were well received by packed galleries,” the Deccan Herald said.

The Indian Express estimated 160-million people watched the games on television and 2-million tickets worth $36m were sold. It forecast the IPL brand valuation would rise from last year’s estimate of $3,67bn.

“If the sense of fulfilment could be calculated, it would run into several billions of dollars,” said N Srinivasan, president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), which runs the event.

The positive assessment­s jar with some off-pitch developmen­ts, mainly the suspension­s of five Indian players after a TV sting claimed to unearth evidence that no-balls could be arranged to order in the IPL.

The report targeted fringe players and provided no proof of corruption within IPL games, but it refocused concern about betting, with India seen as the hub of illegal gambling on cricket.

Meanwhile, Bollywood superstar Shahrukh Kahn dented his huge popularity after becoming involved in an ugly standoff with officials at the Wankhede stadium in Mumbai.

Other incidents included allegation­s made to police — later dropped — that Australian Luke Pomersbach of the Royal Challenger­s Bangalore had molested a woman and beaten up her fiancé in a hotel room in New Delhi.

Separately, SA seamer Wayne Parnell and India spinner Rahul Sharma were questioned by police over their presence at a Mumbai hotel which was raided for being an alleged illegal rave party.

“Whatever is happening is neither cricket not is it our culture,” former federal finance minister Yashwant Sinha, a member of the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, said as the scandals dominated headlines.

“The sports ministry should intervene and make drastic changes in the IPL.”

Former India batsman Sanjay Manjrekar, now a popular commentato­r, said the blame lay in the fact that the tournament was marketed as more than just a cricket tournament.

“The BCCI will realise that packaging the IPL as entertainm­ent may not be such a good idea. It’s got to be just sport,” he said.

Internatio­nal wariness about the IPL was apparent when England’s Kevin Pietersen, who plays for Delhi Daredevils, said he was “sick and tired” of defending his participat­ion, and suggested other countries were jealous.

However, the attraction­s of last-ball winning sixes, extravagan­t switch-hitting and rapid-fire centuries seem to have trumped many concerns, at least in the minds of the Indian public.

This year’s tournament was also not competing with any other major cricket events, unlike last year when it immediatel­y followed the World Cup co-hosted — and won — by India.

“The packed stadiums this year should silence all doubting Thomases,” the BCCI’s Srinivasan said. Sapa-AFP

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