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Bright Lights And Big Money In India’s New Cricket LeagueNAVI MUMBAI, India With an infusion of bling, Bollywood and go-go boots, a new cricket league is trying to spin off India’s colonial inheritance into a money-making symbol of a brash, emerging nation. Ruth Fremson/The New York TimesA new cricket league in India has enlivened a traditional game with laser shows, movie stars and cheerleaders. Whether the Indian Premier League, as it is called, will ultimately succeed in cultivating a loyal fan base at home, challenging cricket’s world order and globalizing the game of the former British Empire remains to be seen. Already, it has upturned many conventions of an erstwhile gentleman’s game, drawn corporate sponsorships from multinational firms selling everything from cellphones to real estate and, with salaries comparable to the English Premier League of soccer, lured some of the top names in international cricket, including players from India’s traditional rivals, like Australia and even Pakistan. The game itself is a fast and furious brand of cricket called Twenty20 referring to 20 overs per team in which games are played in about three hours. In contrast to the leisurely, ritualistic five-day matches played by men in white, this form of cricket is a loud and powerful display of batsmanship geared to grab eyeballs on prime-time television, and sponsored by Adidas (and Nike and Reebok). “Less time, more fun,” was the verdict of Harshal Kini, 20, at a Sunday night match pitting the Mumbai Indians against the Deccan Chargers of Hyderabad. Renuka Tahiliani, 49, seated in the front row with her husband and their 14-year-old son, said, “It’s too hot to sit out here for the whole day.” Cricket is only part of the spectacle. The 10 matches played so far have featured laser shows and stilt walkers, American-style cheerleaders and plenty of Bollywood stars blowing kisses from the stands. It is a coming of age for both the business of sports in India and for Indian billionaires, who for the first time are staking their prestige on sports teams. The league’s most expensive franchise, at nearly $111.9 million, is the Mumbai Indians, fittingly owned by India’s richest man, Mukesh Ambani. The flamboyant liquor baron Vijay Mallya picked up the Bangalore-based Royal Challengers for $111.6 million, and the actor Shah Rukh Khan is backing the Kolkata Knight Riders for $75.09 million. “It is cricket’s version of tabloid journalism,” said Rajdeep Sardesai, the son of a professional Indian cricketer and editor in chief of CNN-IBN, a news channel. “It is much more now about glamour and entertainment than about what happens between the players.” (He said he was not yet a fan, but said it was the only kind of cricket that appealed to his son, now 14.) By upending convention, the league has also invited its share of controversy. Cheerleaders, including the squad belonging to the N.F.L.’s Washington Redskins, whom Mallya imported for the opening match in mid-April, have been greeted by a mixture of enthusiasm and lewd comments from the stands, and indignation from politicians who have found them obscene and in contravention of Indian tradition. “We live in India, where womanhood is worshipped,” said Siddharam Mehetre, a politician in Maharashtra state, where Mumbai and Navi Mumbai are located, according to the Press Trust of India. Local police were on the lookout here at Sunday’s match to see if obscenity laws were being violated. But by then the cheerleaders for the Deccan Chargers, who had worn tartan miniskirts, fishnet stockings and halter tops, were covered in short-sleeve T-shirts and black tights. On the steamy coast of the Arabian Sea, the cheerleaders, who had come from Australia, were drenched in sweat. Later in the week, the Delhi Daredevils took their cheerleaders away altogether. Another embarrassment arose after Harbhajan Singh, the acting captain of the Mumbai Indians and notorious bad boy of Indian cricket, was accused of having slapped S. Sreesanth of Kings XI, who immediately began bawling.The league swiftly fined and barred Singh. One of the most striking things about the new cricket is how patriotism has been scrubbed out of a game. “Cricket has been the major vehicle for Indian nationalism, of a special and aggressive kind,” said Ramachandra Guha, a historian and cricket writer. At a recent night match here, the Mumbai Indians were defeated by the Deccan Chargers, but fans in the packed 55,000-seat stadium kept cheering for the away team, no less, and its star batsman, Adam Gilchrist, an Australian. “We still don’t have our loyalties set yet,” said Dhwani Karania, a 21-year-old college student. “Whoever wins, it’s O.K.” Karim Premji, walking out of a corporate box with his wife and three children, said: “I just appreciate good cricket. Gilchrist was hitting good sixes. I was happy for him and his team.” Sneha Jadav, 20, was riled by the whole concept. “Brothers brothers are fighting,” she said. “They have divided our team.” Jadav said she preferred the cricket that she had grown up watching, where nations play each other. India versus Pakistan, she said, is her favorite. Tag CloudExternal InformationAdditional InformationBlast Reported in Myanmar Capital...U.S. Treasury Official to Help Free Up North Korean Funds... Japan, Home of the Cute and Inbred Dog... Memo From Ashgabat: Behold Turkmenistan’s Marvels! (Authorized Version)... Where Am I?News Main Page - Business - Bright Lights And Big Money In India’s New Cricket League |
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