Friday, December 28, 2007

Pakistan bars rebel league players from domestic game

Pakistan cricket authorities announced that all players who featured in a rebel Indian league will be banned from domestic matches.

Several stars, including former national skipper Inzamam-ul-Haq, signed up to play in the breakaway Indian Cricket League (ICL) despite warnings of future restrictions.

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) communications director Ahsan Malik said the ICL players were now ineligible to play in PCB-organised events.

The rebel players have just returned from India, where the inaugural Twenty20 ICL championship was held.

"We have added a clause to the domestic playing conditions rule, according to which any player featuring in any unauthorised event in Pakistan or abroad will not be eligible to play in our events," Malik told AFP.

The rebel players, including Inzamam, Abdul Razzaq, Imran Farhat, Shabbir Ahmed, Azhar Mahmood and Taufiq Umar, were blocked from the last round of domestic tournament matches which began on Wednesday.

The breakaway Twenty20 ICL is not recognised by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) or the International Cricket Council.

Inzamam played his last Test -- against South Africa in Lahore in October this year -- after signing with the ICL. He quit Test cricket after the match and said he has no intention of returning to first-class cricket.

Another Pakistan star, Mohammad Yousuf, faces legal action in India after withdrawing from a signed contract with the ICL. He has instead signed for the BBCI-backed Indian Premier League due to start in April next year.

Malik said the new ban will be approved at the PCB governing body's meeting next month.

Farhat, whose domestic team Habib Bank started a first-class match from Wednesday, said the players would defy the ban.

"It's not on, the PCB cannot stop us from playing and from earning our livelihood," he told AFP.

Farhat, who played the last of his 33 Tests earlier this year, said he and some of his ICL colleagues are meeting a lawyer to take the matter to court.

"We feel the PCB is unjust on stopping us from playing domestic cricket," said Farhat. "We have a Pentangular event and Twenty20 event in Pakistan and to stage a comeback in the Pakistan team we need to play in these events."

Source : http://www.cricbuzz.com/

Monday, December 24, 2007

The ICL as packaged entertainment

From the time the Indian Cricket League was conceived, the question on everyone's lips was: will it grow or will it be stillborn? If one takes popularity as the yardstick, the grand finale on Sunday evening at the packed Tau Devi Lal Stadium would have put to rest all speculation. The stadium, which is about equidistant from both the Sector 16 ground in Chandigarh and the Punjab Cricket Association's stadium in Mohali, can normally accommodate around 6000, but that figure swelled to 10,000 for the final, with people thronging the railings of various stands, and packing themselves into the grass banks that ring the ground outside.

Subhash Chandra, the head of the Zee group, the league's backers, and Kapil Dev declared the inaugural edition a success as they unveiled plans for the future, but their smiling faces hid uncertainty. For the moment the matter of whether the public would recognise the ICL had been dispelled, but one question remains: did those people throng to the ground to witness a sporting spectacle, or was it the other delights on offer that sucked them in?

The verdict from Panchkula has been no different to those from other parts of the world when it comes to the carnival atmosphere of Twenty20. "Entertainment" was the most popular response if you asked young and old on Sunday for the reason for their attendance at the final. For his part, Kapil has no problems with that. "Sport to me is entertainment and I'll let the public decide what is good for them," he said. Then, in what seemed like an aside, but was delivered in seriousness, he added, "If the crowd would like horse-jumping or a dog show, we'll get them."

Of course, definitions of entertainment vary. For die-hard cricket fans the sight of Chris Cairns blasting sixes over the stands was a dream come true. For others it was the glitter, the dancing girls, the music. Young girls, not quite impressed with the ICL's line-up of players, came in to watch the final nevertheless, to experience something different. For them it was all about the festive spirit.

Shrieks, whistles and horns swept the stadium every time a performer stepped on to the stage. Tanushree Dutta, a former Miss India, now a Bollywood starlet, had the crowd's eyeballs glued to the big screen and stage during the final. On the preceding days, Bollywood beauties Kareena Kapoor, Malaika Arora Khan, and Yana Gupta, and popular singers Kailash Kher and Sukhwinder had performed before completely full to near-vacant stands.

If anything can grapple with the might of cricket in India, it is Bollywood. No wonder, then, that some in the BCCI took umbrage recently at Shahrukh Khan's turning up at Twenty20 games and ODIs, in what they saw as an attempt to promote his films using the cricket. The ICL, backed by Chandra's clout in Bollywood, brought the cast of the forthcoming Sunday - Ajay Devgan, Irrfan Khan, and Ayesha Takia - in for the final. Those three together may not have been able to match the star value of Khan, the reigning emperor of the Hindi movie industry, but Chandra understood that something was better than nothing.

The other stars who stole the show were the cheerleaders, referred to here as "dancing girls", none of them Indian. At the end of the evening, amid the Chennai Superstars' victory celebrations, one bunch of the girls happened to pass through the ground, moving to the other end. The crowd, which had been allowed inside the ring to mingle with the players, turned eagerly to the young women as they walked nervously past, in single file. Fortunately, there were bouncers on hand to see the girls across safe. The atmosphere had something of a college festival or a carnival about it.

It wasn't just the young who had been lured by the glitter and the razzmatazz. Families formed a big chunk of the crowd that braved the numbing cold to watch the Superstars put it across the Chandigarh Lions for the million-dollar prize.

Among the incentives was the fairly priced tickets. Engineering student Vikas Dhiman, a 21-year-old Panchkula native, got a free ticket along with the one he bought for Rs 100. On weekends, for Rs 150 one could watch two games. There were no restrictions on bringing bottles of water or other beverages into the stands. The usual red tape that exists at a regular cricket stadium in India was absent, and the crowd management was smooth, all of which served to make the spectator experience that much more comfortable.

Disappointingly for the organisers, though, by and large, except on the opening and closing days, the turnouts were sparse. Even if a fair number of the league games were played over weekends, and there were stars like Brian Lara, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Chris Cairns on view, the masses didn't pour in. Reportedly, most of those who did turn up were pass-holders from the Haryana Urban Development Authority, which rented the ground to the ICL, and friends and relatives of the various sponsors and organisers.

There may have been a yawning gap between what was on offer in Panchkula and the international Twenty20 experience, but those who did turn up seemed to enjoy themselves. Will they be back for another edition? Chances are, they will. As long as the entertainment is dished out, the actual cricket will not matter much. The curtains have just gone up on the ICL show.

Source : http://content-ind.cricinfo.com/

Friday, December 21, 2007

Breaking News PCB bans seven Pak players for playing in ICL

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has banned seven cricketers, including former skipper Inzamam-ul-Haq from playing the domestic league, for taking part in the Indian Cricket League (ICL).

“Since the ICL is not recognised by the PCB and the Indian cricket board, the players who have joined the ICL despite warnings from their respective boards will not be allowed to play in the domestic circuit,” PCB spokesman said.

Besides Inzamam, the other players banned by the PCB are Abdul Razzaq, Shabbir Ahmad, Azhar Mehmood, Taufiq Umar and Imran Farhat.

“The rebel players have tried to contact the PCB through their respective departments, but the board gave them a cold shoulder,” the spokesman said.

He said despite showing good performance in the ICL, the players would not be considered even for the national camp.

“The board is following ‘zero tolerance policy’ towards such players,” the Daily Times quoted him, as saying.

Source : http://www.aboutindiancricketleague.com/

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

ICL to organise five tournaments in 2008

With the inaugural edition of the Essel Group's Indian Cricket League (ICL) coming to a conclusion, the company's chairman Subhash Chandra, along with ICL chairman executive board Kapil Dev, have announced the calendar for 2008.

ICL will be having five tournaments next year.

In February, there will be a 50-over tournament called Domestic Championship. This will be followed by a triangular 20/20 series which will field an ICL XI, after which will come up the ICL Grand Championship. The 20/20 tournament will have eight sides take part compared to the six, which participated in the recently concluded event.

In the April-May 2008 period, ICL will open academies in different cities. From September till October, there will be another 20/20 event called ICL Invitation Cup

From November-December, ICL will hold the second edition of the ICL 20/20 Indian Championships.

Chandra said, "It is indeed heartening to see the response Indian Cricket League (ICL) has been able to generate in India and across the globe. After a successful launch in keeping with the promise made, ICL is proud to announce its cricket calendar for the coming season."

The first ICL 20/20 Championship took place at the newly built cricket stadium at Panchkula, Chandigarh from 30 November till 16 December. The production facilities included a 30-camera set-up and other higher technical specifications such as the inclusion of fly cam, hawk eye, zoomer, snickometer, speedgun and third umpire.

Dev said, "We are overwhelmed to see the enthusiasm that ICL has been able to generate amongst fans, not only in India but world over. With such a great response, we are happy to announce the way forward for the league in the coming year. The season will ensure an immensely enjoyable cricket carnival. I would like to thank all who have made ICL a success."

Source : http://www.indiantelevision.com/

ICL Announces Calendar for the year 2008


1st Edition of ICL 20 20 Indian Championship generates stupendous response Panchkula: Subhash Chandra, Chairman Essel Group along with Mr. Kapil Dev , Chairman Executive Board ICL today announced the cricket calendar for Indian Cricket League (ICL) for the year 2008. ICL will be having 5 tournaments next year.

Speaking at the occasion, Mr. Subhash Chandra, Chairman Essel Group said, "It is indeed heartening to see the response Indian Cricket League (ICL) has been able to generate in India and across the globe. After a successful launch in keeping with the promise made, ICL is proud to announce its cricket calendar for the coming season."

All set to revolutionise the game of cricket, Indian Cricket League conducted the first ICL 20-20 Championship at the newly built cricket stadium at Panchkula , Chandigarh between November 30th and December 16th. The tournament witnessed world class facilities matching international standards followed in cricket tournaments world over. The high standard production facilities included 30 camera set up, higher technical specifications such as the inclusion of Fly cam, Hawk Eye, Zoomer, Snickometer, Speedgun and Third umpire.

Commenting on the announcement, Mr. Kapil Dev, Chairman-Executive Board, Indian Cricket League said, "We are overwhelmed to see the enthusiasm that Indian Cricket League has been able to generate amongst fans, not only in India but world over. With such a great response we are happy to announce the way forward for the league in the coming year. The season will ensure an immensely enjoyable cricket carnival. I would like to thank all who have made Indian Cricket League a success".

In a short span of time the Indian Cricket League (ICL) undertook significant revamping of the cricket stadium and made various additions to the stadium to ensure an immensely enjoyable cricket carnival. Overhead lights were put up for day-night encounters. A special media centre was erected with all modern facilities to facilitate the working of the media personnel during the tournament.

Source : http://www.indiancricketleague.in/

Friday, December 14, 2007

Spice ties up with ICL for providing live coverage


Telecom service provider Spice has tied up with the Essel Group’s Indian Cricket League (ICL) to provide the live coverage of their ongoing Twenty20 tournament to its subscribers.

The launch of the service, named Spice TV, was attended here today by former international cricketers including Brian Lara and Chris Cairns, who are in the city to participate in the inaugural Twenty20 tourney.

“Our subscribers, both pre-paid and post-paid can now choose from a bouquet of 13 channels ranging from news, entertainment to cartoon channels,” Mukul Khanna, Vice President Marketing, Spice Telecom said.

For watching all the channels, that Spice TV offers, the subscribers will have to pay Rs 175 per month.

The pre-paid subscribers also have the option of paying per day at the rate of Rs 10 for watching all channels while subscribing only to news channels will cost Rs 125 per month and Rs 100 for the entertainment pack.

Source : http://www.aboutindiancricketleague.com/

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

I am still adapting to 20:20 cricket: Lara


His team has unexpectedly crashed out of the inaugural tournament of the Indian Cricket League. Coming into this tournament with the likes of Astle, Lara, van der Wath and Solanki, they were expected to create a lot of excitement for the jam-packed audiences at the Tau Devi Lal Stadium in Panchkula, Chandigarh.
Four consecutive losses and a rare victory meant that the Mumbai Champs would have to settle for fifth or sixth best in the final standings table. They will hope to salvage some pride and finish the tournament on a high note.
Besides Lara, former international stars like Marvan Atapattu, Chris Cairns, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Stuart Law and Craig McMillan are captaining other teams taking part in the 17-day long tournament, finals of which will be played on Sunday. One of the greatest batsmen of the contemporary era, Brian Lara managed only 16 runs from the five matches in the tournament. He had not played a single 20:20 match before the start of the tournament. "I feel I am still adapting to the 20:20 cricket. It has been the first tournament and I hope things will not be the same next time," he said. Lara, captain of Mumbai Champs, one of the six teams featuring in ICL's 20:20 tournament, said youngsters have learnt a lot in the company of former international players. "The confidence and motivation of some of the Indian players playing in this tournament is something to watch for. It is great to see these players learn valuable things here and I am sure four or five years from now they will be playing international cricket," 37-year-old Lara told reporters.

Source : http://www.indiancricketleague.in/

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

ICL no match for India-Pakistan series


For all the hype around the country’s first big league of domestic cricket, Essel Group’s Indian Cricket League (ICL), it’s the ongoing India-Pakistan Test series that remains the big draw among television viewers.

A like-to-like comparison of TAM Peoplemeter’s TV ratings of the simultaneously-on ICL matches and the second India-Pakistan Test shows that the number of people watching India-Pakistan was about five times higher than those watching ICL on the opening day of the league. And the gap only widened on Day Two.

Zee officials, however, insisted that the ICL ratings are “remarkable”. Said Essel group executive V-P Ashish Kaul, “Of course, we can’t compare with an India-Pakistan match that’s the Sholay of cricket, but still our ratings are very encouraging. The ICL ratings are the highest ever for any domestic cricket ever played in the country. In the past, domestic cricket viewing has scored almost zero TRPs. We expect our ratings to triple towards the end of the tournament.”

As per data released by TAM Peoplemeter System, among the target group of four-years-plus viewers across all-India cable and satellite households, the first two days of the ICL tournament saw Zee Sports deliver a TRP of well under 1.

The first ICL match played on November 30, for example, delivered a rating of 0.32. In comparison, on the same day, the same target group delivered a rating of 1.81 on DD1 for the India-Pakistan Test match, that’s about five-and-half times more than what ICL’s opening match posted on Zee Sports. Neo Sports, set back by low connectivity, generated an average TRP of 0.87 two-and-half times more than that of ICL that day.

Essel Group’s Mr Kaul said the ICL has done well when compared to domestic cricket viewership. “What the ICL has done is narrowed the gap between international and domestic cricket viewing audiences,” he said. Citing examples of domestic tournaments such as Challenger Cup and Ranji Super League which, Mr Kaul said, typically average ratings at least 30-40% lower than ICL.

On December 1, which was the second day of the India-Pakistan Test, DD1 posted a TRP of 2.04, with Neo Sports putting up 0.94 on the board. In stark contrast, the two ICL matches played on the same day posted ratings as low as 0.09 and 0.22 on Zee Sports.

Having connectivity of only about half that of overall cable & household households, Zee Sports is also not available on direct-to-home (DTH) platform Tata Sky which has a subscriber base of about 1.5 million.

Essel Group’s decision to telecast the first 30 minutes of the matches across the Zee bouquet too doesn’t seem to have done resulted in higher ratings. On both days, TRPs on Zee channels such as Zee Business, Zee Café, Zee News, Zee Music and regional Zee channels were negligible.

Zee Business and Zee Café delivered zero ratings on the second day of the tournament. ICL matches on flagship channel Zee TV, on both the first two days, also posted ratings of under 1.

Meanwhile, Zee group said that having sold ICL’s international broadcast rights to three global distributors, Astro PPV, Derana and Gateway, ICL’s showing would only get better. “Zee Sports connectivity has improved significantly over the past one month,” Mr Kaul said.

Source : http://www.aboutindiancricketleague.com/

Friday, December 7, 2007

ICL no obstacle in Boje matter: Kapil


Indian Cricket League's Chairman Kapil Dev confirmed that the ICL hasn't received anything in written from the Delhi Police about their intentions to question former South African left-arm spinner Nicky Boje, who is part of Hyderabad Heroes', on his involvement in the match-fixing scandal.

"We haven't received any intimation from them yet. But if they do intend to have any conversations with him, we won't have any objections. They are doing their job, and if they want our help, we will definitely oblige," Kapil told reporters here.

Kapil, however, was elated with the way the first attempt at the breakaway professional league has been received.

"I'm extremely proud of the way the ICL has shaped up. We might not have had teams blazing away to big totals so far, but in hindsight the Twenty20 World Championship, too, saw the 150-mark being breached only eight times," the World Cup winning former captain said, adding that the organisers haven't got any reaction from the top bosses at the BCCI yet.

Kapil, who was also the coach of the Indian cricket team, said he was relieved when the Tau Devi Lal Stadium opened its doors for ICL's inaugural Twenty20 tournament.

"We thought we might have to play in open fields somewhere because everyone seemed to shut the door on us. I'm disappointed that Chandigarh didn't give us the (Sector-16 Stadium) ground even after pleading with them so many times."

Kapil also shed some light on the BCCI's run-ins with Chairman of selectors Dilip Vengsarkar. "He (Vengsarkar) is a respected man in the cricketing circle. I wish him good luck. But if he has a problem with the BCCI, he should look to sort it out amicably," he said, adding that players will never have anyone to speak for them against the governing body if it kept playing the "divide and rule game."

The former India captain, however, came back to his own venture saying that senior international players have been wonderful with the young Indian players, and one should not look into Brian Lara's Mumbai Champs failing to register a win so far.

"Results don't come overnight. If you look around, the likes of Chris Cairns and Inzamam have been brilliant with the young boys, and the standard of fielding in the tournament has been breathtaking. The seniors look as keen as youngsters," he said.

Source : http://www.cricketnext.com/

Thursday, December 6, 2007

‘I was one of the biggest underachievers’ : Mervyn Dillon


Mervyn Dillon is one of the few good fast bowlers who have emerged from the West Indies in recent years.

Tall and endowed with a powerful physique, like many of his fearsome predecessors, he appeared capable of scaling dizzy heights, especially when young and at the peak of his prowess, but did not.

Nevertheless, considering his chequered international career, his record in both Tests and ODIs is more impressive than many members of his tribe across the cricketing globe, not just on the Caribbean.

Dillon granted Haresh Pandya an exclusive interview on the eve of the Indian Cricket League tournament at Panchkula near Chandigarh.

You haven’t been around, nor in the thick of action, for quite some time now. Have you decided to stop playing international cricket?

Well, I haven’t called it a day! Not yet. It’s a bit touchy. I’ve still a lot of cricket in me. I’m still available for the West Indies. It’s all but over. Events like the ICL here and Stanford competition back home have given me an opportunity to continue playing and there is no reason why I shouldn’t enjoy that.

Is it due to frustration, or at not been considered for the West Indies any longer, that you have joined the ICL?

Not really. I’m a very realistic person. I tend to accept life as it comes. You’ve your ups and downs. Life is like that. It’s the understanding that the people in charge of West Indian cricket pick the best possible team. And they’ve been doing that. So even if I’m not involved with the West Indies team, it’s all right. Life goes on. I’m still very fit in body and mind and the ICL and Stanford tournaments are ideal for me.

You bowled many good spells for the West Indies. But taking into account your genius, one is inclined to believe that your best has never been seen on the international stage. What is your personal assessment?

I agree with you. I’ll always be the first to admit that my best has never been seen in international cricket. I remember talking to Steve Waugh and he said that I was one of he biggest underachievers in terms of cricketing talents and resultant performances. Of course, I’ve always played true to my potential during my career. But I don’t want to offer any excuses as to why I didn’t do full justice to my talents. Of course, there’re a lot of things happening in and around West Indian cricket and that’s how it ended up. But I think my best cricket is yet to come. Though I’m 33, I don’t think I was fitter than today in my life.

But why hasn’t your best come out yet?

I think I should have tried harder at times. There is no question about that. But again this isn’t an excuse. I’ve myself to hold fully responsible for what I’ve achieved and what I haven’t. I always tried to give my best regardless of the events off the field.

How was it playing under different captains?

It isn’t so important for me to have played under different captains. It’s not a big issue. My job is to go out there and perform, and take as many wickets as I could, irrespective of who leads the team.

Unfortunately, the system in the West Indies isn’t the best in terms of infrastructure. The things aren’t being done ideally. There is no professionalism in our players.

And it shows up in our cricket there. We’ve abundance of talent but for some reasons we aren’t as consistent as we should be. And consistency comes only when you’ve a proper system that encourages the players. Also, there is no substitute for hard work and ruthless professionalism in contemporary cricket today.

As a fast bowler, did you miss someone at the other end to complement you? Did you have good support from other fast bowlers?

Well, when you look back, one of the players I did very well with was actually a spinner, Dinanath Ramnarain, who was also from my country. But if you look at that particular history, almost every time I was opening the bowling with someone else. Was it a good thing? I don’t think so. I think we looked for too many quick fixes as the years went by.

And too much chopping and changing meant that the guys never got a chance to really settle down. You came in the team and started wondering whether you would be there in the next match or the next series. It put a lot of pressure on them.

There was a time when the West Indies used to produce a plethora of express fast bowlers with frightening regularity. Why is it that not many quality pace bowlers are emerging from the Caribbean?

There are a number of issues. There is so much cricket being played in the world and, like I said, the West Indies has been sort of left behind in terms of modern era of the game and how things are done at the international level. There is a whole science behind the game in the modern era and everybody is moving forward. But we are one of the teams that is lacking in all these things.

Look at Australian cricket and the Australian team. Look at their domestic cricket and their structure. They put just professional players. We’ve a lot of talent but how professional these guys are is a question. If we nurture that talent with a totally professional attitude, I think we’ll get more consistent performances from the players.

Aren’t more and more youngsters in the West Indies preferring basketball and other professional sports to cricket, and going to the USA?

No, no. I totally disagree with that. Cricket is still the biggest sport in the Caribbean. There is no question about that. Yes, we aren’t what we used to be, a lot is lacking in the West Indies, but still more and more youngsters are coming forward to play and take up cricket. This is an encouraging sign.

But people are discouraged by the domestic structure and the way cricket is being run in the West Indies. A lot could be done to improve the standard of cricket, not just in the West Indies, but in many other countries.

You have played with some of the greatest cricketers of the modern era, including Brian Lara. Did you ever imagine, when you started playing cricket, that you would be rubbing shoulders with them?

It’s a dream come true for me. I said it very early in my career that I never thought it was possible for me to play cricket for the West Indies. But it happened. And I played with some of the best players in the world, including Brian Lara, Courtney Walsh, Curtly Ambrose and Ian Bishop — to name only a few. And I’ve also played against some of the best players in the world. So it’s really a dream come true for me. My only regret is that I didn’t justify my own talent the way I should have.

Could you name some of the finest batsmen you came across as a fast bowler?

Talking about the best batsmen, you had Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Jacques Kallis, Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden. All of them top players. It was always a pleasure playing against them.

If given an opportunity, would you like to serve West Indian cricket in some capacity?

Definitely. In fact, it’s one of the things why I’m in the ICL. Cricket has given me a lot. It has given me everything. And I want to pass on my knowledge to the youngsters. I’m thankful to the game for whatever I’m today. Who will be thankful to the game?

Will the West Indies ever regain past glory in cricket?

I think so. I think we are going to get people who understand the game. Cricket is no longer a sport; it’s a business. It has to be run that way. I think the Stanford competition is a brilliant idea. I think it’s something the West Indies Cricket Board should look forward to. It’s well-planned, organised and thoroughly professionalised.

Source : http://indiancricketleaguenews.wordpress.com/

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Twenty questions: cricket at the crossroads


Indian Cricket Twenty20 league began in India on 30th of november. Another Twenty20 league is being launched in the spring. And next autumn a Twenty20 Champions League is being planned. Is there a pattern developing here? Most definitely, reports Stephen Brenkley, and it is one that will threaten every other version of the game

At a scruffy, uninviting little ground in the shadow of the Himalayas yesterday the battle lines were drawn for a sport's future. There, in the Tau Devi Lal Stadium, Panchkula, the Indian Cricket League – rebel, unauthorised, anti-establishment, anything but official – began its life.

The combatants in the inaugural match rejoiced under the names of the Chandigarh Lions and the Delhi Jets.

A little more than 1,000 miles to the east in Calcutta, India were playing Pakistan in the Second Test. There is hardly a more resonant contest in cricket. Down in Sri Lanka, final preparations were in hand for the start of the Test series against England, with the world bowling record at Muttiah Muralitharan's mercy. Across a continent, in Port Elizabeth, New Zealand were wondering what they could do to stop South Africa's charge in the one-day series, top place in the world rankings firmly in view.

Important games all, in their way, but none with the potentially cataclysmic effect of the ICL, an all-singing, all-dancing Twenty20 competition, made as purely for television as a soap opera. So dramatic already has been the fallout that it is possible to fear for all other forms of professional cricket as viable propositions.

The International Cricket Council and many of the travelling parade around the game dismiss such prognostications, but cannot so easily banish the feeling that they are fiddling while the empire is burning. People in their thousands watch Twenty20 and want more of it; fewer are watching Tests and may actually want less of it.

The recent series between South Africa and New Zealand – every day of it – was watched by a man and his dog and the dog went home early. There were hardly more – two men, two dogs – to watch Australia thump Sri Lanka in Brisbane and Hobart.

Of course, Test cricket is a beautiful game and Eden Gardens attracted a large audience yesterday for the first day of India's match against Pakistan. But that too was by no means full. It is a large stadium holding (at least) 90,000, but Calcutta is a city of 14 million people in the most cricket-crazy country in the world. And this was a key match – win it, win the series – against their most significant opponent.

Lalit Modi, the senior vice-president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and its marketing powerhouse, said yesterday that he was unworried. "We actually sold all the tickets. But it is our duty to protect the integrity of Test cricket and we are doing so and will continue to do so. The various forms of the game must co-exist but I have no worries about the state of Test cricket in the short and medium term. We are deliberately restricting the number of international Twenty20 matches we play."

But Modi is also the shrewd cookie who has formed the Indian Premier League, a tournament lasting 44 days next spring, which has already signed 39 of the world's top players. Yes, that's right, it's Twenty20. That will be followed next October by the first T20 Champions League, featuring champion teams from four countries with a £1m first prize.

The stakes are high and the odds are shifting quickly towards Twenty20. If it was not so obviously popular and populist there would not be rebel leagues forking out oodles of cash. Strutting on to the Indian Cricket League's stage and playing for some of the biggest bucks in cricket in the next fortnight will be a rum mixture of players from some of the greats of the modern game – Brian Lara, Inzamam-ul-Haq – to the rump, minor Indian domestic players. Nobody outside of their own clubs has ever heard of Bipul Sharma or Abu Nechim.

In between are a clutch of disaffected former Test players like Dinesh Mongia, foreign veterans and journeymen like Ian Harvey and Dale Benkenstein. Four Englishmen are there: Chris Read, Vikram Solanki, Paul Nixon and Darren Maddy, all of whom have played for England this year. They may be participating not so much for the groundbreaking nature of the cricket but because they are earning around £60,000 for a fortnight's work, plus prize money of £2m.

"I think we needed a little bit more time but everybody decided we would have to start," said Kapil Dev, the former captain of India who is the chief executive and front man of the ICL. "Another month would have meant more preparation but we had to start one day. We are determined. This is like a new baby waiting to come out. I'm scared and worried but happy."

The ICL is up against it. It has had official opprobrium heaped on it and the fact it is being played in the uppermost reaches is appropriate: it has a mountain to climb. Sniffy has been the most common reaction. Giles Clarke, chairman of the ECB, said: "We regard this is as a serious issue. Selectors will be instructed to take into account the fact these players are appearing in an unauthorised competition."

You could hear lawyers expert in restraint of trade sharpening their briefs. It might also be borne in mind that the selectors have not exactly treated any member of the English ICL quartet with much dignity, unauthorised or not.

The competition was invented, no less, by the Essel Group, one of India's largest business groups and owner, among many other things, of Zee TV. It was simply expedient: Zee needed some cricket to put on its channels because to be a cable TV station in India and not to have cricket is of serious commercial concern.

Zee was also probably miffed that although its bid was the largest in the most recent round of TV rights for Indian cricket last year, it lost out. Since the winning bid was more than £300m for four years the size of the business is obvious. Each one-dayer is worth £4m in broadcasting revenue to the BCCI in India and next time it will want much more. TV moguls are falling over themselves to have cricket on air.

No sooner had Zee announced its glittering plans than blocks were put in its path. Indian domestic players were warned that they would be banned if they took part while it was impossible to hire grounds that anybody had ever heard of on which a decent standard of cricket was played.

Zee was treading where Kerry Packer's Channel 9 of Australia had forged a path 30 years ago. Denied the rights to international cricket in Australia despite bidding huge amounts, Packer set up his own competition, World Series Cricket, known disparagingly to the cognoscenti as Packer's Circus.

All the world's top players signed up and Packer won all round. He won in court when the cricket authorities tried to prevent players signing for him and, after two years of WSC, he won on the field when those authorities caved in. The effect of Packer is still being felt now. Cricket was changed for ever. Not only did it enter the late 20th century as a public entertainment as well as a sport but the players were no longer treated as chattels.

So Zee, finding itself in Packer's boat, decided to act. The company found willing accomplices in the Indian domestic players who have long been used as ill-rewarded cannon fodder. The big names of Indian cricket are treated as gods; those in the provincial teams, boys and men making up sides, are barely accorded the time of day. They could not wait to sign up.

The repercussions were swift and the only ground in the entire country which would host the matches was in the little Chandigarh suburb. This, too, is fitting for the enterprise. Devi Lal, after whom the ground was named, was an Indian freedom fighter alongside Gandhi who became a champion of farmers throughout the country and was twice deputy Prime Minister. He spent his life fighting for the small man.

The small stadium, part of a municipal multi-sports complex has been given a makeover to make Trinny and Susannah proud in the past month, but it too is cosmetic and the outfield is still scratchy. Zee will need big live crowds and substantially larger television audiences for it to work.

The BCCI responded immediately with the formation of the Indian Premier League to be played next April and May. Some $1.5m (£730,000) in prize-money is available in the first year of the competition, plus large five-figure salaries for those taking part over 44 days.

Top players – barring anybody from England, because it is their domestic season – were willingly and swiftly enlisted. It is fair to say that they beat a path to the BCCI's door. Later next year the first Twenty20 Champions League will take place, also in India when the top two teams from four countries – India, England, Australia and South Africa – will compete for a huge £1m first prize. That will burgeon quickly.

It is straightforward to see where this might be heading, to a Twenty20 paradise. Or hell on earth, depending on your viewpoint. "The profile of the people who watch Twenty20 and Tests are much different," said Lalit Modi. "The older man watches Tests, Twenty20 is appealing to younger people, children and, for the first time, women. It is also the first time in India that we are getting spectators in for domestic cricket. But you'd be wrong to think that Tests are under threat, though I agree crowds in some places are disappointing. We have to market the games as well as stage them."

The officially backed IPL, which, will consist of eight teams, has already attracted huge commercial interest. More than 100 companies or mega-rich individuals have bid for a slice of the action. The minimum they can expect to pay the BCCI, according to Modi, is £25m, probably much more because there will be a bidding process.

And then there are the television rights, to be sold separately. "There are different reasons people want a franchise, commercial or ego, but they want them," Modi said.

He sounded utterly unconcerned about Kapil Dev's competition and said that the domestic players had jumped too soon. "They are looking to the past, when they were not rewarded very well, instead of the future. Some 26 per cent of all our revenues now goes to players. That has just kicked in and was bound filter down."

It might be tempting to feel sorry for Kapil Dev's ICL except that it has huge financial backing as well. Zee has virtually bottomless resources and if the cricket is exciting the audiences may be guaranteed. But Zee will need to keep on signing big names. "Let's be honest, I'm worried," Kapil said. "I have taken a step that no other sports person has done against all the politicians, the authorities who think they can run the game and some sports people so it's a challenge. If I have enough ability it will work."

For Vikram Solanki and his like it represents a substantial payday. They would have been fools to their families not to take it, whatever the ECB chairman has to say. Modi could afford to be dismissive, but he will have known that cricket changed yesterday and not because of anything that happened in Eden Gardens.

Leading players: Chandigarh – Chris Cairns (New Zealand, 37); Imran Farhat (Pakistan, 25); Hamish Marshall (New Zealand, 28). Delhi – Marvin Atapattu (Sri Lanka 37), Paul Nixon (England, 37), Taufeeq Umar (Pakistan, 26). Chennai – Stuart Law (Australia 39), Chris Read (England, 29) Ian Harvey (Australia,35) Shabbir Ahmed (Pakistan, 31). Kolkata – Craig McMillan (New Zealand, 31) Darren Maddy (England, 33) Lance Klusener (South Africa, 36). Mumbai – Brian Lara (West Indies, 38) Mervyn Dillon (West Indies, 33) Nathan Astle (New Zealand, 36) Vikram Solanki (England, 31). Hyderabad – Inzamam-ul-Haq (Pakistan, 37) Abdul Razzaq (Pakistan, 27) Nicky Boje (South Africa, 34) Azhar Mahmood (Pakistan,32).

Source : http://iclcricket.net/

Monday, December 3, 2007

THE INDIAN CRICKET LEAGUE INVADES THE AMERICAS

Cricket Fans Want More Awaiting The Launch of the Indian Cricket League Across The American Continent
Over 15 million cricket fans residing in North America and the Caribbean are demanding more! With cricket being the second most popular spectator sport world wide and more and more fans working and living throughout the world, International demand for cricket has never been higher. Fans want more cricket, more of the time, or rather more accurately all of the time! In order to meet the demand for cricket a number of cricket organizations throughout the world have expanded the traditional game of cricket from World Cups and Championships into a more easily consumable form of sports entertainment.
In recent years, the Twenty20 format has taken the world of cricket by storm with the first ever Twenty20 World Cup won by the Indian team this year. In an effort to fulfill the demands of fanatic cricket fans, the Indian Cricket League will be launching the first ever Twenty20 competitive Cricket League in the North American and Caribbean regions organized along the structure of other professional franchise sports. According to the Indian Cricket League President Sharad Chikara, the demand for cricket is growing rapidly in North America due to both the large influx of students and workers from many of the cricket playing nations like India, Pakistan, Sri-Lanka, Bangladesh. As well the International attention of cricket, especially the Twenty20 format, has also contributed to the rapidly growing demand in North America.

"Cricket fans worldwide now demand the Twenty20 format because it is more exciting, thrilling, and faster paced resulting in a more enjoyable entertainment experience. Our cricket fans on the IndianCricketLeague.com website forums have attested to the popular demand of the Twenty20 format without a doubt.", Sharad Chikara said. As an example, a fanatic cricket fan recently posted, "Twenty20 is the best thing that happened to cricket. Twenty20 at least defies the logic that cricket can be less interesting due to length of the games. The other good thing about this game is that matches start after working hours and that is the reason we have a new audience in the game. I think this Twenty20 should be played more and more. These matches should be played on home and away basis just like Premier league football. Right now there is not enough Twenty20."

According to initial information released on the website, bringing the Twenty20 format in a professional franchise sports league format to a broader and new audience is precisely what the Indian Cricket League intends to do. "Our mission is to promote and foster the best talent, create a highly competitive environment and provide equal opportunity to talented players. Indian Cricket League will provide superior entertainment, value, and service in competition with other professional spectator sports leagues. We will provide a centralized governing body alongside the investor and franchise opportunity of professional league sports. We believe this will allow us to deliver the ultimate cricket sporting experience for fans, players, coaches, and owners alike!"

The Indian Cricket League was founded in 2005 to provide cricket fans, players, coaches, and owners with a professional league sports platform. Cricket had always lacked the structure that professional sports leagues in the US and Canada have. The league will attract both local and international talent from other cricket playing nations just like Major League Baseball in the US. We want to build quality international cricket players, provide for equal opportunity to the young and the talented, and ensure that the best infrastructure and training is provided to the players. Indian Cricket League will share its pool of talented cricketers with other private cricket leagues and cricketing boards of the world.

Source : http://www.mmdnewswire.com/

New Indian league offers huge rewards, say organisers

Organisers of a rebel Twenty20 league in India on Thursday offered a massive 3.85 million dollars in prize money, claiming it to be the biggest booty ever offered in a cricket tournament.

The Indian Cricket League (ICL), starting on Friday, will see the winner of the six-team competition pocket one million dollars alone, raising the bar for the rival league backed by the country’s cricket board (BCCI).

“This is for the first time in the history of Indian cricket that the total money for a tournament is rupees 15 crore (3.8 million dollars),” said Ashish Kaul, executive vice-president of Essel Group, promoters of the event.

“The prize money allotted for the winners exceeds international standards and will create a new trend in the Indian cricket parlance,” he said in a statement.

The runners-up will receive prize money of 470,000 dollars.

The unofficial league is bankrolled by Subash Chandra, whose two-billion-dollar Essel Group includes the country’s biggest television network Zee Telefilms.

The hefty pay packet on offer has lured the likes of West Indies batting great Brian Lara, Pakistan’s Inzamam-ul-Haq and New Zealand’s Chris Cairns.

The tournament kicks off in Panchkula, an industrial town on the outskirts of the northern Indian city of Chandigarh, with the finale slated for December 16.

The BCCI-backed Indian Premier League is scheduled to be held in April next year.

Source : http://www.cricket247.in/