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Saudi Arabia eyes ‘significant’ stake in IPL, proposes investment up to $5 billion

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Saudi Arabia has expressed interest in buying a multibillion-dollar stake in the Indian Premier League, international cricket’s most lucrative event, following a string of investments that have upended professional sports including football and golf.​

A policeman walks past a logo of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) during a governing council meeting of the Indian Premier League (IPL) at BCCI headquarters in Mumbai April 26, 2010. (REUTERS)
A policeman walks past a logo of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) during a governing council meeting of the Indian Premier League (IPL) at BCCI headquarters in Mumbai April 26, 2010. (REUTERS)



Saudi Arabia has expressed interest in buying a multibillion-dollar stake in the Indian Premier League, international cricket’s most lucrative event, following a string of investments that have upended professional sports including football and golf.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s advisers have sounded out Indian government officials about moving the IPL into a holding company valued at as much as $30 billion, in which Saudi Arabia would then take a significant stake, people familiar with the matter said. The talks were held when the kingdom’s defacto ruler visited India in September, the people said, asking not to be named as the information is not public.
Under plans discussed at the time, the kingdom proposed investing as much as $5 billion into the league and help lead an expansion into other countries, similar to the English Premier League or the European Champions League, the people said.
While the Saudi government is keen to press on with a deal, the Indian government and the country’s powerful but opaque cricket regulator — BCCI — are likely to take a call on the proposal after next year’s federal elections, the people said. The BCCI is led by Jay Shah, the son of India’s Home Minister Amit Shah — a close ally of Premier Narendra Modi.
Saudi Arabia’s powerful sovereign wealth fund, which has anchored many of the kingdom’s previous sports investments, could ultimately be the vehicle used to do a deal with the BCCI if an agreement is reached. No final decisions have yet been made.


Representatives for the BCCI and the Saudi government’s Center for International Communication didn’t respond to requests for comment. The Public Investment Fund declined to comment.
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Since its inception in 2008, the IPL has married American-style marketing with the glitz of Bollywood and the energy of India’s vast population. The IPL’s central strategic move was to discard cricket’s traditional format for broadcast-friendly three or four hour games that encourage big, risky swings and frequent “sixes," cricket’s equivalent of a home run.
The league has drawn a plethora of sponsors, including Aramco and the Saudi tourism authority. And despite a season that runs for just eight weeks each spring, bidders last year paid $6.2 billion for the right to broadcast IPL games through 2027. That works out to $15.1 million per match, more than the EPL and just behind the $17 million networks pay for each game in the National
Any Saudi investment into the IPL or changes to the league’s format will likely mean those agreements for media rights will need to be reworked, according to people familiar with the matter.

Global Cricketing Destination
Over the past few years, Saudi Arabia has splashed out billions of dollars on sports and the chairman of the sport’s governing body in the kingdom has said he wants to turn the nation into a global cricketing destination.
“You can’t compete with money, especially the money that Saudi Arabia is throwing around to certain people," England cricket captain and one of the world’s top players, Ben Stokes, said in an interview this year.
Meanwhile, other attempts to replicate the IPL formula overseas are underway. Major League Cricket, a US upstart part-funded by Satya Nadella and Shantanu Narayen — the chief executive officers of Microsoft Corp. and Adobe Inc. respectively — concluded its first season in July.
That league, and others in South Africa, the United Arab Emirates and elsewhere, haven’t dented the IPL’s commercial dominance.
For Saudi Arabia, any investment in cricket would come after significant spending on sports, primarily golf and football. The PIF backed the LIV Golf tour, which this year agreed to a shock merger with the PGA Tour.
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Saudi Arabia has also led a group that bought English Premier League football club Newcastle United FC, and is now on the brink of hosting the 2034 FIFA World Cup. As part of its push into the world’s most popular sport, the kingdom has spent millions on the likes of Brazil’s Neymar, France’s Karim Benzema and Portuguese superstar Cristiano Ronaldo.
That spending has opened up the Saudi government to claims of “sportswashing" its image and human rights record, though the kingdom’s crown prince has emphasized the deals are primarily intended to boost the country’s economy.

--With assistance from Matthew Martin.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.
 
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Seems Saudis are in massive financial dire straights in coming years. They throwing money to generate income like crazy ....
 
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Seems Saudis are in massive financial dire straights in coming years. They throwing money to generate income like crazy ....

But the return on income for those investments is piss poor given how they are overpaying for everything ..
 
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BCCI will be happy I guess, they will be singing habibi habibi haha

Matches in Saudi can be organized, to keep the investors be happy. MBS can attend some final to see what all this is about.
 
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:pop: Let the money flow. We should also promote our Kabbadi league and internationalize it. Sports is tied to money and sponsorships. Make more league events, we have at least a 100k people watching a sports event at any given time.
 
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Aramco and the Saudi Tourism ministry are already big sponsors. Good, but, gib moar Riyals.. we'll pour it all into the IPL and make it even bigger.

I see it expanding to a 3 month window eventually, which will be significantly up from the current 40 odd days that is carefully coordinated with boards across the world so as to get all the big name major draw guys playing.

Already a few players around the world who have quit either tests or ODIs, but still clinging to their IPL contract.. jab 1.5 months me hi itna monies kamaya ja skta hai, why slog the year round ? Plus, a lot of them play for other 20 leagues tooo.. PSL, CPL, Big Bash... Angrezon ne 100 bhi chalu kar dia hai.

Overall good hoga in the long term but, will help sort the grain from the chaff.. real cricketer hamesha test matches ko hi priority dega. There's nothing quite like a good test match !

red ball game forever !
 
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