Cape Argus

‘At least it’s on’ – IPL sees bright side

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THE Indian Premier League’s (IPL) eight teams are counting the cost of Covid-19’s impact on their finances but having faced the prospect of the tournament being wiped out by the pandemic this year they are taking a ‘glass halffull’ view of the situation.

The IPL’s original March start was scuppered by the first wave of the novel coronaviru­s and India’s cricket board (BCCI) had to pull out all the stops to rescue the Twenty20 league, which has an estimated $6.8-billion (about R114b) brand value.

The tournament has been shifted to the United Arab Emirates, will be played under a hastily-arranged title sponsor, and will start on September 19 – nearly six months later than scheduled.

After Vivo paused its title sponsorshi­p for this year’s edition, fantasy gaming company Dream11 took it up for $30.36-million, roughly half that the Chinese smartphone maker paid annually.

“The discount provided to Dream11 would be a major (financial) hit for the BCCI, along with making arrangemen­ts for bio-secure bubble which will be an additional cost burden on the board,” Santosh N, an external advisor at financial consultanc­y firm Duff & Phelps, said.

The league shares 50% of the title sponsorshi­p money with the eight franchises, who will also miss out on gate receipts and in-stadium revenue this year while existing sponsors demand discounts in the absence of fan initiative­s.

The switch has seen Delhi Capitals lose shirt sponsor Daikin, with the air-conditioni­ng equipment maker saying the new dates did not work for them.

“The reason being the business scenario and the timing, which earlier, being the summer, would call for advertisin­g efforts to create awareness and recall for the AC category,” a Daikin spokesman told Reuters.

Capitals Chairman Parth Jindal said the BCCI should look at compensati­ng the franchises.

“If the BCCI doesn’t compensate, there will be a significan­t loss to each franchise, about a 30% drop in revenues,” Jindal told Mint newspaper earlier this month.

But with the BCCI at risk of a $547-million drop in revenue had the entire season been cancelled, treasurer Arun Sigh Dhumal preferred to look on the bright side. When you encounter such challengin­g times and so many impediment­s, you are bound to lose on certain revenues,” he said.

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