Tag Archive for 'Lalit Modi'

The rough & tumble of a gentleman’s game

ovalThe story so far:

On March 3 militants attacked a bus carrying Sri Lankan cricket players just outside the Gadaffi Stadium in Lahore. Indian Home Minister P. Chidambaram almost immediately appeared on television voicing his doubts on whether India’s security apparatus was equipped to deal with simultaneous elections and cricket. It wasn’t that India could not provide security for IPL2, he said, it was simply that providing security simultaneously to IPL2 and the general elections would stretch our security forces. A simple solution, he suggested, would be to postpone the IPL dates.

Not possible, said IPL administrators led by Lalit Modi. These dates were set in stone in accordance to the international cricket schedule. Worse, said Modi, failure to host the games in India on schedule would amount to loss of national pride. So, various alternatives were trotted out: IPL would get private security; there was no question of moving the venue overseas and, of course, matches could be rescheduled to be held on dates when there was no polling.

When that failed to materialise, Modi went from state to state asking which ones were prepared to take responsibility for security. Suddenly, IPL2 acquired a political hue: Congress-ruled states (Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan and Delhi) said they couldn’t provide security due to the general elections. Finally, on March 22 after days of protracted wrangling and speculation, the BCCI announced that the IPL matches would be held outside India — fans could watch them on primetime TV.

The venue hasn’t yet been announced for the matches to be held between April 10 and May 24, though it’s likely to be a toss-up between England and South Africa.

Meanwhile reactions have varied. Sachin Tendulkar has said IPL abroad simply won’t be the same. And Narendra Modi, Gujarat’s chief minister, said the decision to shift the venue outside the country was forced by the government and was a ‘national shame’) to a condemnation of the BCCI and IPL for refusing to understand that security was a priority and that the general elections had to take precedence over cricket.

In BBC, Gulu Ezekiel looks at the pitfalls still ahead for the IPL.

The decision to shift the second season of the Indian Premier League from its home base to either England or South Africa has further clipped the wings of the IPL czar Lalit Kumar Modi, the man with aspirations to rule the cricket world. Mr Modi is credited with conceptualising cricket’s first franchise-based Twenty20 club cricket tournament – though it was preceded a few months earlier by the “rebel” Indian Cricket League, launched in late 2007 by Indian media magnate Subhash Chandra Goyal.

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(Image attributed to Hashmil under the Creative Commons license)

Cricket entering new golden age with greed its greatest enemy

In The Times, UK,

I keep reading that “cricket is the new football”. That is odd because that was what was being said in 2005, when the Ashes series was gripping a wider than usual proportion of the British public, just as last year’s ICC World Twenty20 tournament in South Africa captivated much of India’s vast population or the explosive fast bowling of Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson enthused Australians, among them Kerry Packer, in 1974-75.

Cricket’s popularity ebbs and flows, like the game itself, but it keeps flowing. Not because it is the new football, but because it is the old cricket, a series of duels between a batsman and a bowler in a team context and varying conditions, a game demanding as much skill, fitness and courage as most others and greater discipline, technique and intelligence than any.

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India’s most powerful people

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In its annual power list, India Today mixes new names with old to come up with a list of those who matter most in the creation of a new India. Some of the names, Ratan Tata (at #1) and Mukesh Ambani (#2) are now standard bearers on the list. Anil Ambani inches his way up to #3.

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Media barons continue to matter. Brothers Samir and Vineet Jain (#9) of the Times of India group, Raghav Bahl (#18) of TV18 and Prannoy and Radhika Roy (#22) of NDTV continue to be on The List, while Ronnie Screwvala (#24) of UTV is the new entrant.

Other names debuting on the list include former President APJ Abdul Kalam (#7), K.V. Kamath (#13), managing director of India’s largest private bank ICICI and Lalit Modi (#29), BCCI’s powerful vice president and the creator of the Indian Premier League.

Film stars continue to make the list with Shah Rukh Khan (#6) way ahead of Amitabh Bachchan (#16), Rajnikant (#28) and Aamir Khan (#38). And cricket, the other religion of India along with films, rules with Sachin Tendulkar (#25) and Mahendra Singh Dhoni (#35).

For a complete look at who’s on the list, and why, click here.