Over 10 seasons, the cricket league has seen its cumulative reach go up at a staggering pace and earned big bucks for advertisers and broadcasters alike
IPL introduced the concept of a glamorous sporting league in India, offering a new form of entertainment for Indian families
Image: Courtesy BCCI
By any measure, Rs 8,200 crore is a huge number. Consider that Rupert Murdoch-owned Star India paid less than half that amount, about Rs 3,851 crore, for the rights to broadcast Indian cricket between 2012 and 2018. So, when Sony Pictures Networks India (SPN) floated the number to bid for the ten-year broadcasting rights of the Indian Premier League (IPL), there were, understandably, a few jitters. There wasn’t clarity on whether IPL would be a Kerry Packer moment, revolutionising the game like the Australian media tycoon did in 1977 with his World Series Cricket played in “coloured pyjamas”, or remain “just another domestic league”.
The very first game played in front of a packed Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru in 2008 between Kolkata Knight Riders—owned by Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan—and Royal Challengers Bangalore—owned by liquor-baron-turned-wilful-defaulter Vijay Mallya—settled all doubts. Batting for KKR, Kiwi opener Brendon McCullum smashed an unbeaten 158 of 73 balls, peppering his innings with 10 fours and 13 sixes. As an exuberant Khan cheered from the stands, Bollywood numbers blared between shots, and crowd frenzy reached fever pitch as KKR beat the home team by 140 runs, Sony knew it had backed the right horse: Cricket plus entertainment would be a heady cocktail and IPL was here to stay.
(This story appears in the 12 May, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)