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IPL will boost global game, says chairman

Reuters

Posted: 2008-02-13 14:36:01+05:30 IST
Updated: Feb 13, 2008 at 1454 hrs IST

Mumbai, February 13: : The multi-million dollar Indian Premier League (IPL) will not cast a shadow over international cricket and will be a boon to the game around the world, says the chairman of the new Twenty20 tournament.

Lalit Modi said in an interview that the Indian board's league, which is sanctioned by the International Cricket Council and due for launch on April 18, would actually motivate players to earn more caps for their country.

Worries that cash-rich India would exert its financial muscle to make the IPL a more lucrative option than international cricket were unfounded, he added.

"As far as the IPL is concerned, the value of a player to us is only if he is playing for his national side. We have put enough safeguards into the system to ensure that," Modi said.

The IPL, to be played in March and April each year, has eight franchises that were sold for a combined $700 million to companies and consortiums last month for a 10-year period.

More than 80 international cricketers are expected to feature in a players' auction in Mumbai on Feb. 20 with each franchise having a cap of $5 million.

Modi was confident the 16 Australian players contracted would be available to take part in the auction and that an ongoing sponsorship row between the IPL and Cricket Australia (CA) would be resolved.

CA want protection for its sponsors during the IPL, a request the organisers have rejected.

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Modi said the benefits of the IPL far outweighed any negatives.

"It benefits world cricket because it benefits all their players - they are able to supplement their income by coming to us," he said.

"It is not of benefit to us (Indian board) alone, it is to the benefit of everybody else. Also keep in mind, the months we have scheduled this in - April and May - there are not many countries usually playing international cricket."

The tournament, which was set up to counter an unofficial Indian Twenty20 league that began late last year, will be played over 44 days in eight cities and will feature 59 matches aimed at prime-time television in India, which has a population of 1.1 billion people and the world's biggest cricket audience.

Organisers announced last month they had secured a 10-year rights contract worth more than $1 billion for the league. Television rights were worth $918 million, with another $100 million for the league's promotion.

"We want the IPL to be one of the...

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