Indian Premier League (IPL) franchise officials woke up to a
'surprise development' on Friday (June 24) morning when they learnt from
the media about the BCCI's plans to host 'IPL Overseas' in September
this year and make it an annual affair.
On May 23, Times of India
had reported about the cricket board's plans to host a 'mini-IPL' in
September, following which a few IPL franchise representatives had
expressed surprise and said they'd not been informed of any such
development yet.
On Friday, they had a similar
reaction except that this time, Anurag Thakur, the BCCI president, was
the one revealing the plans.
September is a rare
month in the international cricket calendar when almost all cricket
nations find space for a breather. It is for that reason that the
International Cricket Council (ICC) is also in talks with a giant
broadcaster to fit in a once-in-two-years World Twenty20 during the same
time.
"Either way you look at it, it's going to
build up into another battle for the September slot between the BCCI and
the ICC," said a cricket industry executive tracking the developments.
The
space for an overseas IPL was first created last year when BCCI, in
agreement with Cricket Australia and Cricket South Africa, scrapped the
Champions League T20 which was bleeding money for broadcasters Star
India. Shashank Manohar, the former BCCI president, had also asked a
couple of state cricket associations to not plan their own T20 leagues
(on the lines of the Karnataka Premier League) and assured that BCCI
would float the 'mini-IPL' soon.
After that, given the onus
on the Lodha Committee report and the ongoing Supreme Court mandate in
the backdrop of the spot-fixing scandal, all plans were swept aside.
Now
that the BCCI is once again busy talking about 'IPL overseas', the
question is when will they find the time to speak to the franchises
about it. "We have no clue. All we know is what the media's reported,"
said two franchise officials while one franchise owner's reaction was a
simple "what's that?" when asked for a reaction on the 'IPL overseas'.
Franchise
representatives say that if the BCCI is indeed serious about conducting
such a tournament from this year, they have to let them know the
details in terms of finances, operations, player availability player
fees and more. The general feeling among most stakeholders, including
the franchises, is that the BCCI is ignoring them while it is busy
trying to appease potential broadcasters.
"Champions League earned
franchises half-a-million dollars as appearance fees every year and in
turn, franchises had to pay their players 10% of the IPL fee per season
if the team qualified. The entire operations were also managed by the
BCCI, logistics included. Is it going to work on the same lines or any
different, we have no clue," the franchise official said.
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