Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Big-money Indian Premier League turning cricket into gold

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With the high-octane, big-hitting carnival providing a must-see product, driving broadcast subscripti­ons by the millions and pulling in huge advertisin­g revenue, some businesses are willing to splash out nearly $1 billion just to get a chance to field a team

THE INDIAN Premier League is the goose that laid the golden egg for the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).

It has made millionair­es out of young players, generated invaluable publicity for team owners and made BCCI one of the richest governing bodies in global sport.

The world’s most valuable cricket tournament, now in its 15th iteration and boasting the likes of Virat Kohli, Pat Cummins and Jos Buttler, was a pioneer in Twenty20 league cricket.

Its success and popularity have spawned copycat competitio­ns in other countries and generated a fortune for the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).

The high-octane, big-hitting carnival provides a must-see product, driving broadcast subscripti­ons by the millions and pulling in huge advertisin­g revenue.

Some businesses are willing to splash out nearly $1 billion just to get a chance to field a team on the IPL’s golden wicket.

When the tournament expanded to 10 teams this year from the original eight, the auction for the rights to own the new franchises drew internatio­nal bidders including the Glazer family, who own Manchester United.

They were ultimately beaten out by Indian tycoon Sanjiv Goenka’s RPSG conglomera­te, who paid the BCCI $930 million to form the Lucknow Super Giants.

The second new franchise, the Gujarat Titans, cost the global venture fund CVC Capital $690 million.

The sums are eye-watering for teams that will only play two months a year, but Simon Chadwick, a sports economy professor at the Emlyon Business School in France, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that it was worth the investment.

“The IPL is already a massive commercial opportunit­y, but given India’s economic growth, expanding middle class and massive potential as a market for digital, it will potentiall­y become even more lucrative,” said Chadwick.

Broadcast rights are the BCCI’s biggest money-spinner.

Star India, owned by Disney, paid $2.55 billion for a five-year television and digital rights deal that expires at the end of this season.

Analysts expect the next package, for 2023-2027, to balloon to as much as $6.6 billion. Reports say the league will also earn the BCCI around $130 million in sponsorshi­p this year alone.

Title sponsor Tata, the Indian steel-to-broadcast conglomera­te, is the biggest contributo­r with others including finance apps, an online education firm and a fantasy gaming site.

‘RECESSION PROOF’

The BCCI earned $533 million from the IPL in 2020, treasurer Arun Dhumal told Indian media, but its finances are cloaked in secrecy. The last annual report on its website is for 2016-17, but reports say a subsequent filing put its net worth at $2 billion.

IPL teams receive a share of the television rights and sponsorshi­p money, and around 10 to 15% of ticket sales.

They can also generate their own revenue through lucrative shirt or other sponsorshi­ps.

The teams spent nearly $75 million in the February player auction, with Mumbai Indians retaining wicket-keeper-batsman Ishan Kishan for $2 million and Punjab Kings paying England’s Liam Livingston­e $1.52 million for his services.

By contrast, the average player contract in England’s six-month-long County Championsh­ip is $66,000.

DOGGED BY SCANDAL

The league was the brainchild of cricket administra­tor Lalit Modi, who fled India for London after being sacked in 2010 over allegation­s of corruption and money laundering.

The IPL has been dogged by scandal.

A 2013 spot-fixing and betting investigat­ion resulted in the Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals being suspended for two seasons.

Entreprene­ur Subrata Roy’s Sahara group pulled its Pune Warriors team from the 2013 IPL as it fought accusation­s that it had scammed millions of dollars from vast numbers of India’s poorest families.

The Royal Challenger­s Bangalore team is owned by the Indian arm of British drinks giant Diageo, United Spirits, whose chairman Vijay Mallya stepped down in 2016 over allegation­s of financial mismanagem­ent and is now fighting extraditio­n from Britain.

But for veteran cricket journalist Pradeep Magazine, the IPL’s biggest drawback is the threat it poses to traditiona­l cricket, in particular five-day Test matches.

“They (BCCI) will have a lot of money but it’s also going to destroy the traditiona­l format,” he told AFP.

“The people who are going to pay huge money would also want this game to become bigger and bigger and consume more hours.”

 ?? ?? This photo shows a user checking the IPL Dream11 applicatio­n, New Delhi, Oct. 12, 2020.
This photo shows a user checking the IPL Dream11 applicatio­n, New Delhi, Oct. 12, 2020.

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