Archive for October, 2007

Ashok Malhotra joins Indian Cricket League

Written by karan on Tuesday, October 30th, 2007 in IPL News.

Cricinfo staff

Ashok Malhotra, the former Indian batsman, has announced that he has joined the Indian Cricket League (ICL) in a coaching role, though his official capacity hasn’t yet been decided.

“I was left with no choice as it seemed I had to pay the price for calling a spade a spade. You could say I got hounded out [by the establishment].Today as I see it, I have much more respect in ICL,” Malhotra told the Telegraph, a Kolkata-based newspaper.

Malhotra had trained the ICL recruits in an unofficial capacity in their second training camp held at the Mayajaal Sports Complex in Chennai earlier this month. Malhotra played seven Tests, scoring 226 runs at 25.11, and 20 ODIs, scoring 457 runs at 30.46. He was also a stand-in coach and a national selector. The ICL’s inaugural Twenty20 tournament starts on November 30 in Panchkula, near Chandigarh.

Australian stars sign with IPL

Written by karan on Sunday, October 28th, 2007 in IPL News.

Cricinfo staff

Ricky Ponting, Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden are among an extensive list of Australia’s frontline players who have signed with the Indian Premier League, according to a report in the Sunday Age. The paper said the BCCI had outlaid more than $2 million to secure the stars for the Twenty20 tournament.

Andrew Symonds, Brett Lee, Nathan Bracken, Michael Hussey, Brad Haddin and Mitchell Johnson were also reportedly on the list. The IPL has already attracted Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath, with Simon Katich and Jason Gillespie also set to play.

The paper reported that Neil Maxwell, a player agent, will hand the groups’s IPL contracts to Lalit Modi, the BCCI vice-president, in Dubai on Sunday. Next year’s tournament is likely to take place in April, meaning several of the Australian-contracted players might be unavailable as the team will tour Pakistan and West Indies around that time.

Australia’s states also have questions over who an Australian player would represent if their Indian franchise and their home state both reached the Champions League following the IPL. “We’re still very much at the thrashing-out stage, but I’ve been led to believe that if that happens, someone like Brett Lee’s first commitment would be to his home state,” Dave Gilbert, the chief executive of Cricket New South Wales said.

“These sorts of things must be spelt out at the start, so there can’t be any grey areas. It would be good to get this worked out as soon as possible.”

‘BCCI’s IPL could affect English county cricket’

Written by karan on Thursday, October 25th, 2007 in IPL News.

‘BCCI’s IPL could affect English county cricket’ Qaiser Mohammad Ali | Saturday, 20 October , 2007, 17:01 Mumbai: The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) is “apprehensive” that the Indian Premier League (IPL) will steal the thunder of the English County Championships as their dates are set to clash when India’s inter-city league starts in April.

ECB, which has pledged support to the Board of Control for Cricket India (BCCI) on IPL, is wary as its domestic cricket season also begins in mid April, when the maiden edition of the IPL - featuring players from all 10 Test-playing countries - is tentatively scheduled to start.

Special: India vs Australia

ECB feels that all its top players may head for India, leaving the domestic tournaments poorer. “The ECB is apprehensive and it has conveyed to us its apprehension about the timing of the IPL. It feels that its own county competitions would be affected as even English players are scheduled to play in the IPL,” a top BCCI official, who is also a member of the IPL governing council, told IANS here.

“We are trying to work out such dates that do not clash with the English county programme. So, the starting date of the IPL may be either advanced by 10 or 15 days from the tentatively proposed mid-April start,” said the official who attended the first governing council meeting here Thursday.

‘Inappropriate behaviour’ disqualified Warne to captain Australia

Significantly, no English player figures among the 29 foreign players who have so far signed to play in the IPL, as the ECB has not given them permission. Since the IPL has support of all the boards, players have to get their permission before signing.

However, some of the biggest stars from Australia, Pakistan, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, South Africa and West Indies have already signed. They include Shane Warne, Glen McGrath, Stephen Fleming, Mahela Jayawardene, Sanath Jayasuriya, Graeme Smith, Shoaib Akhtar, Mohammed Yousuf, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Shaun Pollock.

ECB is very particular about its national tournaments. It meticulously draws the fixtures of these as also those involving its national team against visiting teams during the English summer. The domestic matches and the Tests/One-Day Internationals are played simultaneously in England.

The fixtures of the English domestic tournaments are usually announced in October. But they have so far not been disclosed, clearly because of ECB’s “apprehension” of the impact IPL may have on its domestic season.

The IPL was launched Sep 13 in New Delhi in the presence of the heads of all 10 Test-paying countries as well as International Cricket Council (ICC) president Ray Mali.

IPL chairman and commissioner Lalit Modi said Thursday that the governing council has decided the first edition would be a 44-day affair, featuring eight franchises, or teams named after Indian cities. Each team will play seven home and away games against all others.

Modi, also a BCCI vice-president, said that each team would have 16 players, including four from abroad. The teams will include players registered with the BCCI and drawn from the centrally contracted pool.

Indian Premier League snaps up top pair

Written by karan on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 in IPL News.

The Indian Premier League has secured the services of South Africa all-rounder Shaun Pollock and Pakistan paceman Shoaib Akhtar.

The Twenty20 format league, which is due to get underway in April, was set up by the India Cricket Board to counter the rebel Indian Cricket League that is to feature West Indian legend Brian Lara. 

And, with the backing of the Australian, England, South African and Pakistan boards, the IPL has attracted some top names from the world of cricket. 

In addition to Pollock and Shoaib, international skippers Graeme Smith, Mahela Jayawardene and Daniel Vettori are also among 25 foreign stars to sign up. 

The debut IPL season will start with eight teams, while organisers hope to double the field by 2010. 

Pakistan Skipper Shoaib Malik Joins Indian Premier League

Written by karan on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 in IPL News.

Pakistan captain Shoaib Malik along with fellow batsman Younus Khan and fast bowler Mohammad Asif have joined the official Indian Premier League (IPL).

New Zealand wicketkeeper-batsman Brendon McCullum is also the IPL’s latest signing.

“Malik, Khan, Asif and McCullum signed up with the IPL, taking the number of international cricketers to 29,” BCCI vice-president Lalit Modi was quoted as saying to espnstar.com.

South African all-rounder Shaun Pollock, New Zealand paceman Jacob Oram and Pakistani fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar have also agreed to play in the league.

Three Pakistan players join Indian board’s new league

Written by karan on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 in IPL News.

Pakistan captain Shoaib Malik and team mates Younis Khan and Mohammad Asif have signed up for the inaugural Indian Premier League (IPL), organisers said on Thursday.

New Zealand wicketkeeper-batsman Brendon McCullum has also joined, taking to 29 the number of foreign players who have committed to the lucrative Twenty20 event which starts in April.The 44-day tournament will feature eight franchises, the IPL said in a statement, with each squad containing 16 players.

The $3 million (1.46 million pound) IPL was launched by the Indian cricket board in September, with support from other national boards to counter an unofficial version planned next month.Those already signed up include international captains Graeme Smith of South Africa and Mahela Jayawardene of Sri Lanka and Pakistan batsman Mohammad Yousuf.

Mallya, Hero, RCom in talks to own Twenty-20 teams

Written by karan on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 in IPL News.

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Liquor and airline baron Vijay Mallya, auto major Hero Honda and leading telecom company Reliance Communications have started negotiations with the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) to buy the rights of teams that will play in the Twenty20 tourney, which was announced to counter Subhash Chandra’s Indian Cricket League (ICL).
 
The BCCI had announced the Indian Premier League (IPL), which is modelled on the popular soccer tournament, English Premier League.
 
The IPL will include domestic and foreign teams that will play tournaments, including in the Twenty20 format. Under the Twenty20 format, the company is not a sponsor but the owner of the team.
 
Apart from the ownership amount, a company will have to deal separately with each cricketer it wants in its team. The amount the company will pay for a player depends on the company’s bargaining power.
 
Spokespersons of Reliance Communications and Hero Honda declined to comment. The sources said Mallya has initiated talks with the BCCI.
 
The BCCI has asked corporates to pay between $50 million and $60 million (Rs 200 crore to Rs 240 crore) to own an IPL team (for lifetime). In turn, the BCCI will offer companies a revenue share from stadium advertising and gate money.
 
The teams can also be listed on the stock exchanges and buyers have the right to resell the team at a premium. However, the team owner will not have any share in the revenue the BCCI earns through selling television rights.
 
The sources close to the development said these companies have shown interest and negotiations are on with the BCCI. BCCI vice-president Lalit Modi declined to comment.
 
Vijay Mallya had recently bought a 50 per cent stake in the Dutch Formula One team Spyker for $120 million through a consortium, Orange India Holdings, which he formed with Michiel Mol, director of Formula 1 at Spyker.

Rival cricket leagues do battle in India

Written by karan on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 in IPL News.


 

NEW DELHI - India’s new-found fascination for Twenty20 cricket has turned into a tug-of-war as money, power and court battles overshadow the country’s most popular sport. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is determined to be the sole crusader of the lucrative crowd-pulling Twenty20 format in cricket-mad India despite its secretary Niranjan Shah earlier describing Twenty20 as a “waste of time.”

This apparent change of heart had nothing to do with Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s young Team India winning the inaugural Twenty20 world championships in South Africa in September, an event Indian officials once strongly opposed.

It had everything to do with the unveiling in May of the unofficial multi-million-dollar so-called rebel Indian Cricket League (ICL), bankrolled by the country’s largest media group, Zee Telefilms.A rattled BCCI banned cricketers signing up to the ICL from representing the country, forcing the rebel body to file an ongoing case challenging the BCCI’s monopoly over the sport.

The BCCI also drew up its own three-million-dollar Indian Premier League (IPL) with the blessing of the International Cricket Council and supported by boards around the world.And so began a game of oneupmanship, lapped up greedily by the media and showing no signs of abating with no apparent concern for the effects it could have on players, their international commitments and the sport in India.

The Zee-backed ICL presented India’s only World Cup-winning captain Kapil Dev as its chief executive, while the BCCI’s IPL paraded the country’s other legend, Sunil Gavaskar, and popular commentator Ravi Shastri as members of its governing council.At the moment the IPL is seemingly winning the battle in terms of getting star players to sign up.

It says it has on board Test captains Graeme Smith of South Africa, Daniel Vettori of New Zealand, Shoaib Malik of Pakistan and the entire Team India.The IPL also persuaded ICL’s main draw, Pakistani star batsman Mohammad Yousuf, to break his contract with the rebel league and sign up with the official body, prompting the ICL to serve legal papers on the player.

The best the ICL has managed so far are retired international stars, headed by West Indian great Brian Lara and Pakistan’s Inzamam-ul-Haq, along with a slew of domestic has-beens.Both leagues ? despite obvious deep pockets ? have found it easier to sign up big names than finalise start dates and other details of the events they plan to stage.

The only real concrete fact is that both leagues will feature Twenty20 matches between franchised teams made up of international players and young promising Indians.The ICL may begin in November and the BCCI is looking to start the IPL in April next year, although like much in this saga, nothing is certain.

The beleaguered Asia Cup limited-overs tournament, already put off twice before and now scheduled to be held in Pakistan in April-May, faces an uncertain future if the IPL is held at the same time and there are concerns the players may end up playing too much cricket.Unsurprisingly, not everyone is impressed at the potential impact the leagues could have on cricket.

“If the proto-typical young cricketer is happy signing up for IPL franchises and making his money there, is he going to bother playing five-day cricket?”, veteran columnist Ashok Malik said.Cricinfo, the game’s leading website, said: “Money could make Twenty20 the most lucrative form of cricket any aspiring cricketer wants to play.

“So what that would do to cricket skills and talent pools for longer versions of the game is anyone’s guess.”Also, it could change the way we look at cricket. Teams based on regional affiliations will be replaced by teams based on commerce, players playing not for local pride but for top dollar.

“That’s how football has grown in the last 20 years ? and not everyone’s happy with the shape it’s in today.”

ICL 20-20 to roll from Nov 30 at Chandigarh

Written by karan on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 in IPL News.

The Indian Cricket League (ICL), an Essel Group venture, today announced that the inaugural ICL 20-20 championship comprising 20 matches will take place from November 30 to December 16, at Tau Devi Lal Cricket Stadium, Panchkula, Chandigarh.

The announcement came after an executive board meeting held in Chennai today. There will be 15 league matches wherein all teams play each other once, followed by 5 classification matches. The final preceded by the 5th/6th place and the 3rd/4th place deciding matches will take place on ‘Super Sunday’ December 16.

Kapil Dev, executive board chairman, Indian Cricket League said: “The ICL 20-20 Indian Championship will be held as promised, later next month at Chandigarh. We are working hard to deliver a very exciting tournament for Indian viewers.

I am confident that the public in this country will witness for the first time a fully professionally run and well-organised extravaganza of cricket.”

ICL had a tough time in getting a venue for the matches. Kapil Dev in an earlier statement said the tournament, originally scheduled for October, has been moved to November as cricketers would be free from international duty by that time.

The league has signed up 18 new cricketers ? six international and 12 domestic players. Among the first domestic cricketers to join the league were Dinesh Mongia, Reetinder Singh Sodhi, J P Yadav, Deep Das Gupta, Laxmi Ratan Shukla, T Kumaran and Ambati Rayudu.

The international players who have signed contracts to play for ICL include Chris Cairns, Chris Harris, Nathan Astle, Hamish Marshal, Darren Maddy, Azhar Mahmood, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Imran Farhat and Abdul Razzaq, former South African all-rounders Lance Klusener and Nicky Boje.

The BCCI-run Indian Premier League’s contracts have been dubbed as “the worst contracts in professional sport” by the head of the New Zealand Cricket Players’ Association.

Heath Mills, the association’s manager, said Scott Styris had signed the deal but he was unsure if skipper Daniel Vettori had already committed.Mills said the IPL and New Zealand Cricket (NZC) had pressurised the players to accept the lucrative three-year deals or the offers would be withdrawn.

“We recommended they didn’t sign the contract put in front of them and I’m not sure Daniel has signed,” Mills was quoted as saying to the Dominion Post.

“The contracts put in front of the players are the worst contract I’ve seen in professional sport. Players around the world have been signing it and they have no idea what they are signing away. It does not stipulate the rights they are giving away to Indian cricket. I’m concerned our guys signing it will put them in breach of their NZC contracts.

“I don’t think it is a very good contract at all. It is a one and a half page document. Our contracts are 100 pages long and people are very aware of their obligations and restrictions.”



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