Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

India’s WPL aims for the top in women’s cricket

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THE newly launched Women's Premier League is aiming to become the leading competitio­n in women's cricket. The inaugural season of the Women's Premier League (WPL) got under way in Mumbai on Saturday, and while the season may just be 22 days long, it could put women's cricket on a very different path.

“It's going to be perhaps the most transforma­tive competitio­n ever seen in women's cricket,” said Melinda Farrell of ESPN, a leading authority on the woman's sport.

The five-team tournament follows the fastpaced T20 format in which games last about three hours. The Delhi Capitals, Royal Challenger­s Bangalore, Gujarat Giants, Mumbai Indians and Lucknow-based UP Warriorz will compete until March 26.

The money invested is already eye-catching. About US$580 million was spent on acquiring the five franchises in January.

The broadcasti­ng rights were sold to Viacom18 for US$117m over five years, a deal that is the second highest per game in women's sport in the world, behind only basketball in the United States.

“Such big sums are both an indicator of the strength of women's cricket but also an enabler of further changes to come,” said Simon Chadwick, professor of sport and geopolitic­al economy at SKEMA Business School in France.

“Investors in the sport recognise that there is already significan­t popular engagement with it, which, with improved leadership and management, could yield greater returns in the future,” he said.

In February, the Indian conglomera­te Tata Group was announced as the title sponsor for the first five years, and while the amount it paid has not been disclosed, it is thought to be substantia­l.

“The more money that enters the sport, the more money there will be to develop players, create infrastruc­ture and build competitio­ns,” Chadwick said.

“Money isn't the answer to every problem, but in this situation, it certainly helps.”

Women’s cricket on

the rise

The WPL was born at a time of growing interest in women's cricket around the world.

In 2009, the Women's World Cup final between England and New Zealand was watched by a little more than 2,000 fans in Sydney. The 2020 final of the T20 World Cup, however, saw 86 000 people pack the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

“That shows the interest there is in going to the games, let alone watching that on TV,” Farrell said.

“The last T20 World Cup in Australia broke all records for attendance and viewing figures. There is a global increase in women's cricket, and that will translate into a lot of interest.”

There are now more competitio­ns for women. In 2021, The Hundred was born in England, an even shorter format of the game than T20 with just 100 balls. It is designed to attract new audiences that may find the traditiona­l five-day test format too long and too slow.

Eight teams played in a round-robin league format, which saw a total attendance of 271 000 last year. In Australia, the 2021 final of the Women's Big Bash attracted 535 000 viewers.

In Pakistan, another cricket-loving nation in South Asia, there is also interest.

The WPL “is a great initiative that will put more eyeballs on women's cricket”, said sports commentato­r Umaid Wasim of Dawn, one of the country's leading newspapers.

“Just like the men's leagues around the world, this will see similar women's leagues spring all across the globe with Pakistan trying to hold a similar tournament later this year,” he said.

The WPL will be the biggest and most lucrative women's cricket competitio­n. The February 13 auction saw almost 1 500 women compete for its 90 spots — 18 in each franchise. India's Smriti Mandhana will earn the most after Bangalore bid about US$413 000 for her.

 ?? ?? Mumbai Indians captain Harmanpree­t Kaur (left) and Ashleigh Gardner of the Gujarat Giants finish their game on March 4, 2023, at Patil Stadium
WPL DY in Navi Mumbai with a handshake after the Indians won by 143 runs.
Mumbai Indians captain Harmanpree­t Kaur (left) and Ashleigh Gardner of the Gujarat Giants finish their game on March 4, 2023, at Patil Stadium WPL DY in Navi Mumbai with a handshake after the Indians won by 143 runs.

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