ashant
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The only permanent thing is change. And the cricket world order has changed dramatically.
IPL is now the 2nd highest paying sporting league, if you consider the number of weeks the players put in. It's generating massive revenue and employment for many. It has relegated regular forms of cricket to the connoisseurs, just like classical music has it's niche audience. There will be resistance from the old guard, but IPL is here to stay. Indian cricket fans have their dose of entertainment every evening during the IPL season and the IPL T20 standard of cricket is world class. So, wishing away the IPL is just wishful thinking.
So the bottom line is that, as a cricketer or a cricket media person, either you are making money or you are losing out. And the people not in IPL (henceforth called the "losers") are crying out loud. The losers can now pretend to be loyal to a purer variety of cricket, or maybe loyal to their respective boards, but they are losing out on making big money in their short and uncertain careers. Tough luck for them for all they can do now is cry.
There is already massive pressure on the other boards to reserve a window for the IPL, and the ICC and the boards should have worked it out by now. The voices will not be against the "BCCI jugga shahi", but for the IPL window. Country vs IPL should not be a choice for the players to make, it's asking too much of them. They should be able to choose both.
IPL is now the 2nd highest paying sporting league, if you consider the number of weeks the players put in. It's generating massive revenue and employment for many. It has relegated regular forms of cricket to the connoisseurs, just like classical music has it's niche audience. There will be resistance from the old guard, but IPL is here to stay. Indian cricket fans have their dose of entertainment every evening during the IPL season and the IPL T20 standard of cricket is world class. So, wishing away the IPL is just wishful thinking.
So the bottom line is that, as a cricketer or a cricket media person, either you are making money or you are losing out. And the people not in IPL (henceforth called the "losers") are crying out loud. The losers can now pretend to be loyal to a purer variety of cricket, or maybe loyal to their respective boards, but they are losing out on making big money in their short and uncertain careers. Tough luck for them for all they can do now is cry.
There is already massive pressure on the other boards to reserve a window for the IPL, and the ICC and the boards should have worked it out by now. The voices will not be against the "BCCI jugga shahi", but for the IPL window. Country vs IPL should not be a choice for the players to make, it's asking too much of them. They should be able to choose both.