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Sunday, April 13, 2008

IPL relaxes media restrictions


IPL relaxes media restrictions



The standoff between the Indian Premier League and the media over controversial guidelines to cover the inaugural tournament looks set to ease as the IPL governing body has issued relaxed guidelines for media to cover the Twenty20 extravaganza.

The IPL has toned down some of its earlier restrictions, especially benefiting the print media and their respective websites. However, the websites having no print association would not be able to cover the matches from the ground. The IPL ban on news agencies supplying images to the websites stays. The fresh guidelines have been issued after a meeting with media representatives and IPL governing body members on Tuesday.

The new guidelines, which have been reduced to two pages, allowed website reporters to the venue a day before the match and for post match press conferences only. No online use or publication or syndication of any photograph clicked by accredited photographers is allowed except for the website of the publication.

The media gallery of a website can have up to any six pictures per match beyond whatever else is carried in the newspaper’s various editions.

The rules however warned the photographers for supplying pictures to any third party, including web portals and syndicates.

Earlier, IPL chairman and Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) vice-president Lalit Modi agreed to relax rules to benefit the print media after discussing the matter with the Sports Journalists’ Federation of India (SJFI) and sports editors of mainline dailies on Monday.

Last week, the IPL had announced the media guidelines for accreditation, which a large section of the media houses found unacceptable.

The SJFI, on behalf of sports journalists and photographers, requested the BCCI President Sharad Pawar to resolve the contentious clauses.

The contentious norms arose from IPL’s terms and conditions, in which BCCI attempted to appropriate intellectual property rights on photographs shot by media organizations. IPL had banned websites from the event and demanded that agencies and print media houses upload, at their own cost, the pictures shot by them on IPL’s website for unrestricted use. Media organizations were irked by these guidelines, which amounted to restricting the use of images in any other publication even if it belonged to the same media house.

That BCCI was under some pressure was evident - the link to the media guidelines on the official tournament’s website was deactivated soon after the controversy broke.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

IPL Teams - Chennai Super Kings


IPL Teams - Chennai Super Kings



Chennai Super Kings is the Chennai franchise for the Indian Premier League. The team will be led by Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the highest-paid IPL Player, and coached by Kepler Wessels. There is no Icon Player for the team.

Chennai Super Kings are a part of the eight club Indian Premier League. The franchise is owned by India Cements, who paid $91 million to acquire the rights of the franchise for the next 10 years. Former India test player Kris Srikkanth is the brand ambassador for the franchise, and another former Indian opener V. B. Chandrasekhar will be the chief selector. The brand ambasssadors for the team will be South Indian actor, Vijay and actress, Nayantara.

The M.A.Chidambaram stadium (often referred to as Chepauk, the place where the stadium is located) will be the home ground of the IPL team. The theme song of Chennai Super Kings, penned by Vairamuthu, is presently being composed by G V Prakash Kumar.

The name “Super Kings” is to honor the rulers of the golden era of Tamil culture, the team logo has a Lion to reflect the King of the Jungle. In addition the word “Super” is colloquially used in the state of Tamil Nadu to reflect all things thrilling and exciting and is a word of the lips of almost every one in Tamil Nadu. Incidentally the Chennai team playing in the ICL (the rebel league) is named as “Chennai Superstars”.

Players
Chennai Super Kings are one of the three franchises with no icon player. The lack of an icon player benefited the Super Kings during the bidding as they managed to bid successfully on two (Dhoni & Muralitharan) of the six A listed players.

The team plans to have twenty three players on its roster. Besides the list of players already acquired, the team will pick the remaining members from the three catchment areas - Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Railways - that have been allocated to it.

Name - Age - Country - Position
Batsmen

Matthew Hayden - 36 - Australia - Left-handed Batsman
Stephen Fleming - 35 - New Zealand - Left-handed Batsman
Suresh Raina - 21 - India - Left-handed Batsman
Michael Hussey - 32 - Australia - Left-handed Batsman
Anirudha Srikkanth - 21 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Subramaniam Badrinath - 28 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Napoleon Einstein - 18 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Wicketkeepers

Mahendra Singh Dhoni (Captain) - 26 - India - Right-handed Wicket keeper
Parthiv Patel - 22 - India - Left-handed Wicket keeper
All Rounders

Jacob Oram - 28 - New Zealand - Left-handed Batsman/Right-arm medium-fast
Albie Morkel - 28 - South Africa - Left-handed Batsman/Right-arm fast-medium
Shadab Jakati - 27 - India - Slow left-arm orthodox spin
Abhinav Mukund - 18 - India - Left-handed Batsman/Right-arm leg-break
Viraj Kadbe - 18 - India - Right-arm leg-break
Bowlers

Muttiah Muralitharan - 35 - Sri Lanka - Right-arm off-break
Joginder Sharma - 24 - India - Right-arm fast-medium
Makhaya Ntini - 30 - South Africa - Right-arm fast
R. Ashwin - 21 - India - Right-arm off-break
Sudeep Tyagi - 20 - India - Right-arm fast-medium
Lakshmipathy Balaji - 26 - India - Right-arm fast-medium

Administration and Coaching Staff

Owner - India Cement Ltd.
CEO - TBA
Ambassador - Kris Srikkanth, film stars Joseph Vijay and Nayantara
Chief Selector - V. B. Chandrasekhar
Coaches:

Head Coach - Kepler Wessels
Assistant Coach - TBA
Physiotherapist - Tommy Simsek
Physical Trainer - Gregory King

IPL Teams - Bangalore Royal Challengers


IPL Teams - Bangalore Royal Challengers



Bangalore Royal Challengers is the team that is going to represent the city of Bangalore in the Indian Premier League, the inaugural Twenty20 cricket tournament to be held in India. The team is owned by the liquor magnate Vijay Mallya, the chairman of UB Group. Charu Sharma is the CEO of the team and Rahul Dravid, the captain of the team is the Icon Player. Martin Crowe, the former New Zealand captain, has also been signed as a member of the management team. Venkatesh Prasad, the former Indian fast bowler and the present bowling coach of India has been declared the coach for the team.

Bangalore team was won by Vijay Mallya, who paid US$111.6 million for it. This was the second highest bid for a team in the IPL, next only to Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries’ bid of $111.9 million for the Mumbai team.

Indian actresses Deepika Padukone and Katrina Kaif were signed as the brand ambassadors of the franchise.

Vijay Mallya wanted to associate one of his top-selling liquor brands, either ‘No. 1 McDowell’s’ or ‘Royal Challenge’ with the team. Ultimately, ‘Royal Challenge’ was chosen, and hence the team was given the name ‘Bangalore Royal Challengers’. The jersey colours of the team are red and golden yellow, and the logo consists of the RC emblem with ‘Bangalore Royal Challengers’ in standard format.


Players
The players in the team (except for Rahul Dravid, who was the Icon Player), were selected in an auction conducted by BCCI on 20 February 2008. South Africa’s Jacques Kallis at $900,000 became the costliest player to be selected to play for the Royal Challengers. This meant that Rahul Dravid, being the Icon Player would be paid $1,035,000 (15% more than the highest bid player in the team). Other players selected included the Indian Test cricket captain Anil Kumble along with his team-mates Praveen Kumar and Zaheer Khan, West Indian Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Aussies Nathan Bracken and Cameron White, South Africa’s Mark Boucher (Wicket Keeper) and Dale Steyn.

Name - Age - Country - Position
Batsmen

Rahul Dravid (Captain/Icon Player) - 35 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Shivnarine Chanderpaul - 33 - West Indies - Left-handed Batsman
Wasim Jaffer - 30 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Misbah-ul-Haq - 33 - Pakistan - Right-handed Batsman
Ross Taylor - 24 - New Zealand - Right-handed Batsman
Arun Kumar J. - 33 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Appanna K. P. - 19 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Bharat Chipli - 25 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Wicket Keepers

Mark Boucher - 31 - South Africa - Right-handed Batsman / Wicket keeper
Shreevats Goswami - 18 - India - Left-hand Batsman / Wicket keeper
Devraj Patil - 23 - India - Right-handed Batsman / Wicket keeper
Allrounders

Jacques Kallis - 32 - South Africa - Right-arm fast-medium
Cameron White - 24 - Australia - Right-handed Leg-break googly
Sunil Joshi - 37 - India - Left-handed Slow left-arm orthodox spin
Akhil B. - 30 - India - Right-arm medium-fast
Virat Kohli - 19 - India - Right-arm medium
Bowlers

Anil Kumble - 37 - India - Right-arm leg-break googly
Zaheer Khan - 29 - India - Left-arm medium-fast
Nathan Bracken - 30 - Australia - Left-arm fast-medium
Dale Steyn - 24 - South Africa - Right-arm fast
Praveen Kumar - 21 - India - Right-arm medium-fast
Abdur Razzak - 25 - Bangladesh - Slow left-arm orthodox
Vinay Kumar R. - 24 - India - Right-arm medium-fast
Administration and coaching staff

Front Office:

Owner- Vijay Mallya
CEO - Charu Sharma
Adviser - Martin Crowe
Coaches:

Head Coach - Venkatesh Prasad
Assistant Head Coach - TBA
Physiotherapist - TBA

Mumbai Indians


Mumbai Indians




Mumbai Indians will be representative of the city of Mumbai in the Indian Premier League. The team will be led by Sachin Tendulkar, also the Icon Player for the team and coached by Lalchand Rajput, the former Manager of the Indian Cricket Team.

Reliance Industries Limited through its subsidiary Reliance Retail Ltd purchased the rights for the Mumbai franchise of Indian Premier league for a total of $111.9 million during the auction on January 24, 2008. The RIL bid has made the Mumbai Indians the most expensive franchise in IPL.

The team logo has the Sudarshan Chakra with the team’s name engraved in it. The team’s colour will be blue. The choice of the name “Indians” for a regional competition is widely regarded as a blunder.

The mascot is still unknown.

Players
Sachin Tendulkar is the designated icon player and also captain for Mumbai Indians. During the player auction Mumbai Indians successfully bid for 7 players, including two of the heroes of Indian Twenty-20 world cup side in Harbhajan Singh and Robin Uthappa. Sanath Jayasuriya was also another prized catch, along with South African legend Shaun Pollock. The team also added the Sri Lankan speedster Lasith Malinga.

Outside of the player auction, the franchise has also signed up Ajinkya Rahane and Abhishek Nayar (from Mumbai), Yogesh Takawale (from Maharashtra) and Pinal Shah (from Baroda)

Name - Age - Country - Position
Batsmen

Sachin Tendulkar (Captain) - 35 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Robin Uthappa - 22 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Loots Botsman - 30 - South Africa - Right-handed Batsman
Ashley Prince - 30 - South Africa - Left-handed Batsman
Manish Pandey - 18 - India - Right-handed Batsman
Saurabh Tiwari - 18 - India - Left-handed Batsman
Wicket Keepers

Yogesh Takawale - 23 - India - Right-handed Batsman - Wicket keeper
Pinal Shah - 20 - India - Right-handed Batsman - Wicket keeper
All Rounders

Sanath Jayasuriya - 37 - Sri Lanka - Slow left-arm orthodox spin
Shaun Pollock - 35 - South Africa - Right-arm medium-fast
Ajinkya Rahane - 19 - India - Right-arm medium
Bowlers

Harbhajan Singh - 27 - India - Right-arm off-break
Lasith Malinga - 24 - Sri Lanka - Right-arm fast
Dilhara Fernando - 29 - Sri Lanka - Right-arm fast-medium
Abhishek Nayar - 24 - India - Right-arm medium-fast
Ashish Nehra - 28 - India - Left-arm fast-medium

Administration and Coaching staffFront Office:


Owner - Reliance Industries Limited
CEO - R Balachandran
President - Mukesh Ambani
Coaches:

Head Coach - Lalchand Rajput
Assistant Head Coach - TBA
Physiotherapist - TBA

Posted by sarath at 6:03 AM 0 comments

Punjab Kings


Punjab Kings




Coach: Tom Moody

Player Age Country Cost (USD)
Yuvraj Singh ♠ (c) 26 India $1,063,750 ♠
Irfan Pathan 23 India $925,000
Brett Lee 31 Australia $900,000
Kumar Sangakkara 30 Sri Lanka $700,000
Sreesanth 25 India $625,000
Mahela Jayawardene 30 Sri Lanka $475,000
Piyush Chawla 19 India $400,000
Ramnaresh Sarwan 27 West Indies $225,000
Simon Katich 32 Australia $200,000
Ramesh Powar 29 India $170,000
James Hopes 29 Australia $324,000[12]
Luke Pomersbach 23 Australia $50,000
Ajitesh Argal 19 India
Karan Goel 21 India
Uday Kaul 20 India
Kyle Mills 28 New Zealand $150,000
VRV Singh 23 India
Tanmay Srivastava 18 India
Total purchase price $5,733,750

Mumbai Indians


Mumbai Indians





Coach: Lalchand Rajput

Player Age Country Cost (USD)
Sachin Tendulkar ♠ (c) 34 India $1,121,250 ♠
Sanath Jayasuriya 38 Sri Lanka $975,000
Harbhajan Singh 27 India $850,000
Robin Uthappa 22 India $800,000
Shaun Pollock 34 South Africa $550,000
Lasith Malinga 24 Sri Lanka $350,000
Loots Bosman 30 South Africa $175,000
Ashwell Prince 30 South Africa $175,000
Dilhara Fernando 28 Sri Lanka $150,000
Abhishek Nayar 24 India
Manish Pandey 18 India
Ajinkya Rahane 19 India
Pinal Shah 20 India
Yogesh Vijay Takawale 23 India
Saurabh Tiwary 18 India
Ashish Nehra 29 India

Total purchase price $5,146,250

Kolkata Knight Riders


Kolkata Knight Riders




Coach: John Buchanan

Player Age Country Cost (USD)
Sourav Ganguly ♠ (c) 35 India $1,092,500 ♠
Ishant Sharma 19 India $950,000
Chris Gayle 28 West Indies $800,000
Brendon McCullum 26 New Zealand $700,000
David Hussey 30 Australia $625,000
Shoaib Akhtar 32 Pakistan $425,000
Murali Kartik 31 India $425,000
Ricky Ponting 33 Australia $400,000
Ajit Agarkar 30 India $330,000
Umar Gul 23 Pakistan $150,000
Tatenda Taibu 24 Zimbabwe $125,000
Siddarth Kaul 17 India
Iqbal Abdulla 18 India
Mohammad Hafeez 27 Pakistan
Salman Butt 23 Pakistan Total purchase price $6,022,500

Rajasthan Royals


Rajasthan Royals







Coach: Shane Warne


Shane Warne (c) 38 Australia $450,000
Yusuf Pathan 25 India $475,000
Graeme Smith 27 South Africa $475,000
Mohammad Kaif 27 India $675,000
Munaf Patel 24 India $275,000
Younis Khan 30 Pakistan $225,000
Justin Langer 37 Australia $200,000
Kamran Akmal 26 Pakistan $150,000
Shane Watson 27 Australia $125,000
Dimitri Mascarenhas 30 England $100,000
Morne Morkel 23 South Africa $60,000
Ravindra Jadeja 19 India
Taruwar Kohli 19 India



Pankaj Singh 22 India
Anup Revandkar 20 India



Sohail Tanvir 23 Pakistan
Total purchase price $3,210,000

Deccan Chargers


Deccan Chargers





Coach: Robin Singh

Player Age Country Cost (USD)

Andrew Symonds 32 Australia $1,350,000
R. P. Singh 22 India $875,000
Rohit Sharma 20 India $750,000
Adam Gilchrist 36 Australia $700,000
Shahid Afridi 27 Pakistan $675,000
Herschelle Gibbs 34 South Africa $575,000
V. V. S. Laxman (c) 33 India $375,000
Chaminda Vaas 34 Sri Lanka $200,000
Scott Styris 32 New Zealand $175,000
Nuwan Zoysa 29 Sri Lanka $110,000
Chamara Silva 28 Sri Lanka $100,000
Halhadar Das 21 India
Doddapaneni Kalyankrishna 24 India
Pragyan Ojha 21 India
Dwaraka Ravi Teja 20 India
Venugopal Rao 26 India $25,000
Paidikalva Vijaykumar 21 India
Arjun Yadav 26 India
Total purchase price $5,885,000

Delhi DareDevils


Delhi DareDevils


Coach: Greg Shipperd
Player Age Country Cost (USD)
Virender Sehwag ♠ (c) 29 India $833,750 ♠
Gautam Gambhir 26 India $725,000
Manoj Tiwary 22 India $675,000
Mohammad Asif 25 Pakistan $650,000
Daniel Vettori 29 New Zealand $625,000
Dinesh Karthik 22 India $525,000
Shoaib Malik 26 Pakistan $500,000
Glenn McGrath 38 Australia $350,000
AB de Villiers 24 South Africa $300,000
Tillakaratne Dilshan 31 Sri Lanka $250,000
Farveez Maharoof 23 Sri Lanka $225,000
Rajat Bhatia 28 India
Shikhar Dhawan 22 India
Brett Geeves 25 Australia $50,000
Yo Mahesh 20 India
Mithun Manhas 28 India
Pradeep Sangwan 17 India
Mayank Tehlan 21 India
Total purchase price $5,622,500

Chennai Super Kings


Chennai Super Kings


Coach: Kepler Wessels

Player Age Country Cost (USD)
Mahendra Singh Dhoni (c) 26 India $1,500,000
Jacob Oram 28 New Zealand $675,000
Suresh Raina 21 India $650,000
Albie Morkel 28 South Africa $675,000
Muttiah Muralitharan 35 Sri Lanka $600,000
Matthew Hayden 36 Australia $375,000
Michael Hussey 32 Australia $350,000
Stephen Fleming 35 New Zealand $350,000
Parthiv Patel 22 India $325,000
Joginder Sharma 24 India $225,000
Makhaya Ntini 30 South Africa $200,000
Sudeep Tyagi 20 India
Srikkanth Anirudha 20 India
R Ashwin 21 India
Subramaniam Badrinath 27 India
Napoleon Einstein 18 India
Shadab Jakati 27 India
Abhinav Mukund 18 India
Lakshmipathy Balaji 26 India
Total purchase price $5,925,000

Bangalore Royal Challengers


Bangalore Royal Challengers






Coach: Venkatesh Prasad
Player Age Country Cost (USD)
Rahul Dravid ♠ (c) 35 India $1,035,000 ♠
Jacques Kallis 32 South Africa $900,000
Anil Kumble 37 India $500,000
Cameron White 24 Australia $500,000
Zaheer Khan 29 India $450,000
Mark Boucher 31 South Africa $450,000
Nathan Bracken 30 Australia $325,000
Dale Steyn 24 South Africa $325,000
Praveen Kumar 22 India $300,000
Shivnarine Chanderpaul 33 West Indies $200,000
Wasim Jaffer 30 India $150,000
Misbah-ul-Haq 33 Pakistan $125,000
Ross Taylor 24 New Zealand $100,000
Abdur Razzak 25 Bangladesh $50,000
Balachandra Akhil 30 India
KP Appanna 19 India
Jagadeesh Arunkumar 33 India
Sunil Joshi 37 India
Virat Kohli 19 India
Devraj Patil 23 India
Bharat Chipli 25 India
Shreevats Goswami 18 India
Vinay Kumar 24 India
Total purchase price $5,410,000

Mumbai to host 10 Indian Premier League matches



Mumbai to host 10 Indian Premier League matches





Mumbai will play host to ten matches in the April 18-June 1 Indian Premier League, which commences with the Bangalore-Kolkata match in Bangalore.

Mumbai plays seven home matches, like all other franchises, besides hosting the semi-finals (May 30 and 31) and June 1 final.

IPL's complete schedule:
April 18: Bangalore v Kolkata at Bangalore
April 19: Mohali v Chennai at Mohali and Delhi v Jaipur at Delhi
April 20: Mumbai v Bangalore at Mumbai; Kolkata v Hyderabad at Kolkata
April 21: Jaipur v Mohali at Jaipur
April 22: Hyderabad v Delhi at Hyderabad
April 23: Chennai v Mumbai at Chennai
April 24: Hyderabad v Jaipur at Hyderabad
April 25: Mohali v Mumbai at Mohali
April 26: Bangalore v Jaipur at Bangalore; Chennai v Kolkata at Chennai
April 27: Mumbai v Hyderabad at Mumbai; Mohali v Delhi at Mohali
April 28: Bangalore v Chennai at Bangalore
April 29: Kolkata v Mumbai at Kolkata
April 30: Delhi v Bangalore at Delhi.
May 1: Hyderabad v Mohali at Hyderabad; Jaipur v Kolkata at Jaipur
May 2: Chennai v Delhi at Chennai.
May 3: Hyderabad at Bangalore at Hyderabad; Mohali v Kolkata at Mohali
May 4: Mumbai v Delhi at Mumbai; Jaipur v Chennai at Jaipur
May 5: Bangalore v Mohali at Bangalore
May 6: Chennai v Hyderabad at Chennai
May 7: Mumbai v Jaipur at Mumbai
May 8: Delhi v Chennai at Delhi; Kolkata v Bangalore at Kolkata
May 9: Jaipur v Hyderabad at Jaipur
May 10: Bangalore v Mumbai at Bangalore; Chennai v Mohali at Chennai
May 11: Hyderabad v Kolkata at Hyderabad; Jaipur v Delhi at Jaipur
May 12: Mohali v Bangalore at Mohali
May 13: Kolkata v Delhi at Kolkata
May 14: Mumbai v Chennai at Mumbai; Mohali v Jaipur at Mohali
May 15: Delhi v Hyderabad at Delhi
May 16: Mumbai v Kolkata at Mumbai
May 17: Delhi v Mohali at Delhi; Jaipur v Bangalore at Jaipur
May 18: Hyderabad v Mumbai at Hyderabad; Kolkata v Chenna at Kolkata
May 19: Bangalore v Delhi at Bangalore
May 20: Kolkata v Jaipur at Kolkata
May 21: Mumbai v Mohali at Mumbai; Chennai v Bangalore at Chennai
May 22: Delhi v Kolkata at Delhi
May 23: Mohali v Hyderabad at Mohali.
May 24: Delhi v Mumbai at Delhi; Chennai v Jaipur at Chennai
May 25: Bangalore v Hyderabad at Bangalore; Kolkata v Mohali at Kolkata
May 26: Jaipur v Mumbai at Jaipur
May 27: Hyderabad v Chennai at Hyderabad
May 28 and 29: Rest days
May 30: First semi-final at Mumbai
May 31: Second semi-final at Mumbai
June 1: Final at Mumbai

Top player purchases at IPL auction


Top player purchases at IPL auction




Following are the 21 most expensive players purchased by the Indian Premier League's eight franchises at an auction on Wednesday.

The teams will pay the winning bid to the player annually. The contracts are for a three-year period and are guaranteed by the Indian cricket board.

The inaugural 44-day, Twenty20 tournament gets underway on April 18. India's one-day captain Mahendra Dhoni is the costliest player at $1.5 million per year for three years.



1. Mahendra Dhoni (India) $1.5m to Chennai
2. Andrew Symonds (Australia) $1.35m to Hyderabad
3. Sanath Jayasuriya (Sri Lanka) $975,000 to Mumbai
4. Ishant Sharma (India) $950,000 to Kolkata
5. Irfan Pathan (India) $925,000 to Mohali
6. Brett Lee (Australia) $900,000 to Mohali
6. Jacques Kallis (South Africa) $900,000 to Bangalore
8. RP Singh (India) $875,000 to Hyderabad
9. Harbhajan Singh (India) $850,000 to Mumbai
10. Chris Gayle (West Indies) $800,000 to Kolkata
10. Robin Uthappa (India) $800,000 to Mumbai
12. Rohit Sharma (India) $750,000 to Hyderabad
13. Gautam Gambhir (India) $725,000 to Delhi
14. Brendon McCullum (New Zealand) $700,000 to Kolkata
14. Kumar Sangakkara (Sri Lanka) $700,000 to Mohali
14. Adam Gilchrist (Australia) $700,000 to Hyderabad
17. Shahid Afridi (Pakistan) $675,000 to Hyderabad
17. Jacob Oram (New Zealand) $675,000 to Chennai
17. Albie Morkel (South Africa) $675,000 to Chennai
17. Mohammad Kaif (India) $675,000 to Jaipur
17. Manoj Tiwary (India) $675,000 to Delhi

The Great Indian Cricket Auction


The Great Indian Cricket Auction




Franchise owners spent lavishly in a player auction Wednesday for the new Indian Premier League, with India's Mahendra Singh Dhoni topping bids on a day that demonstrated the enormous financial power of the Twenty20 competition.

Spending on players nearly touched US$42 million. Already, US$1.026 billion had been paid for the initial television rights and $723.6 million for franchise ownership.

Chennai trumped Mumbai in the race for India's ODI captain Dhoni, with all team owners cheering the breaking of the US$1 million mark as the southern Indian team landed him on a three-year contract worth US$1.5 million per season.

Dhoni, currently in Australia for the limited-overs tri-series, was relaxed about being the most sought player for the league which begins April 18.

''I heard about it from my manager soon after the bid was held. The sum seems to be good and I'm happy, but I was never in any sort of tension about it, nor was I losing sleep over it,'' Dhoni was quoted as saying.

"In all 75 players were sold. We withdrew Mohammad Yousuf (Pakistan) and Ashwell Prince (South Africa)," IPL chairman Lalit Modi said at the end of the closed-door auction that lasted for over eight hours.

Virender Sehwag was moved up to the 'icon' category. An 'icon' will get 15 per cent over the side's highest paid player.

A ringside view of the great Indian cricket auction, team by high-spending team.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Franchises


Franchises



The winning bidders for the eight franchises were announced on January 24, 2008.[9] While the total base price for auction was US$400 million, the auction fetched US$723.59 million.[10] The official list of franchise owners announced and the winning bids were as follows.

Franchise Owner(s) Price (USD)
Mumbai Indians
Mukesh Ambani and Reliance Industries Limited $111.9 million
Bangalore Royal Challengers Dr. Vijay Mallya and UB group $111.6 million
Deccan Chargers
Deccan Chronicle $107 million
Chennai Super Kings India Cements and N Srinivasan $91 million
Delhi DareDevils GMR Holdings $84 million
Punjab Kings
Preity Zinta, Ness Wadia, Karan Paul (Apeejay Surendera Group) and Mohit Burman (Dabur) $76 million
Kolkata Knight Riders
Shah Rukh Khan, Juhi Chawla Mehta and Jai Mehta $75.09 million
Rajasthan Royals Emerging Media: (Manoj Badale, Lachlan Murdoch, Suresh Chellaram)

IPL :Billion Dollar Baby


IPL :Billion Dollar Baby





If you thought cricket was big, wait for this. The IPL promises to be bigger than anything India has ever seen. We give the inside-out of this billion-dollar baby…

What is the Indian Premier League?

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) launched the Indian Premier League (IPL) on September 14, 2007. Based on the lines of the English Premier League (EPL) and the National Basketball League (NBA), the IPL is said to be the brainchild of BCCI vice-president Lalit Modi. The idea was first floated in 1996 but was shot down as the board felt it would go against the zonal system of domestic cricket. The project moved into top gear when the Zee group launched a rival Indian Cricket League on similar lines in April 2007.

Who are the franchisees?

The franchisees will own the eight teams in the fray. They can run them in their own styles, bring their own sponsors and even name the team according to their choice. They will even be free to list their teams on the stock exchange.

How is it different from the football and hockey leagues in India?

The IPL, in a way, is not very different in its format vis-a-vis the PHL or the I-League in football. It is, however, totally different in its concept as the teams have been offered to franchisees (individuals or corporates) through a bidding process that culminated on Thursday. The BCCI has already signed up 80 international players who will also be put for auction soon.

When will the IPL matches be played and where?

Under lights, on a home and away basis, in the cities that have formed the teams. The league opens on April 18 and will see 59 matches spread over 44 days

What kind of money is involved in IPL?

The overall prize money will be US $5 million, with the winners taking home $2 million. The remaining will be up for grabs in different forms, like man of the match awards and cash prizes. By contrast, the winners of the 2007 ICC World Cup
in the Caribbean took home $1 million; the Indian team that won the World Twenty20 got half of that. TV rights have already gone for over $1 billion. Franchisees have already committed close to US $723 million. Top players are expected to earn minimum 1-2 crores per season.

What is already in place for IPL?

With the league scheduled for April 2008, the IPL has so far sold the eight teams to corporate houses and signed leading players. Indian stars like Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly will be called “icon players” and can play only for their respective cities. They will be the highest paid players and will not be auctioned. The bidding will take place next month.

Who owns the IPL TV rights?

Sony Entertainment, a division of Japan’s Sony Corp, and the Asia-based World Sports Group (WSG) won the broadcast rights for ten years, worth more than a whopping US $1 billion. TV rights are worth $918 million, with $100 million set aside for promotion.
Who will run the IPL?

BCCI has formed an IPL council that comprises former BCCI president IS Bindra, vice-presidents Rajiv Shukla, Chirayu Amin, Lalit Modi and Arun Jaitley, and former cricketers Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, Sunil Gavaskar and Ravi Shastri. While the BCCI officials are honorary members, Pataudi, Gavaskar and Shastri will be paid for their services. The IPL governing council will have a five-year term and will run, operate and manage the league independently of the BCCI.

BCCI launches international Twenty20 league


BCCI launches international Twenty20 league




The Indian board launched a new international Twenty20 competition called the BCCI Indian Premier League. Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne have confirmed their association with the league and BCCI vice-president Lalit Modi was named as its convenor.

The tournament is scheduled to start in April 2008 and will last for 44 days involving 59 matches. The total prize-money for the league is around $3 million. The matches will be played on a home-and-away basis.

Glenn McGrath, Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Anil Kumble, Sourav Ganguly and Stephen Fleming were among those present at the press conference held at Delhi.

The governing council comprises former Indian captains Ravi Shastri, Sunil Gavaskar, MAK Pataudi, and BCCI office-bearers Rajiv Shulka and Chirayu Amin, Punjab Cricket Association president IS Bindra and Delhi and Districts Cricket Association president Arun Jaitley. It will operate initially on a five-year term.

The announcements were made following a BCCI meeting attended by representatives of all Test-playing nations.