Tag: India cricket

  • India vs Pakistan clash smashes TV records with 20.6 crore viewers

    India vs Pakistan clash smashes TV records with 20.6 crore viewers

    MUMBAI: There are rivalries, and then there’s this-India vs Pakistan, a battle that grips the subcontinent tighter than a Virat Kohli cover drive. The latest chapter of this age-old sporting saga was played out in the ICC Men’s Champions Trophy 2025, and, surprise, surprise-it shattered television records! JioStar, the broadcaster with a flair for the dramatic, powered the showdown to an eye-watering 20.6 crore TV viewers, making it the second most-watched cricket match in BARC history outside of World Cup games.

    For a match hyped as The Greatest Rivalry by Star Sports since 2021, it sure lived up to its billing. The 23 February contest in Dubai even outperformed the high-stakes India-Pakistan face-off during the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2023 in Ahmedabad, registering an 11 per cent higher TV rating (TVR). With a staggering 2609 crore minutes of TV watch-time logged, it was clear that cricket lovers weren’t just watching-they were glued to their screens as if their remotes had vanished into the couch abyss.

    A JioStar – sports spokesperson, basking in the afterglow of this mammoth success, summed it up, “JioStar is scaling new heights as far as India’s experience of marquee sporting events is concerned. Combining the power of deep consumer focus, immersive storytelling, universalised access and incisive marketing, Star Sports has galvanised the interest in this age-old rivalry. We remain committed to serving fans, deepening fandom and recruiting new cohorts.”

    And if the cricket wasn’t drama enough, the internet exploded when cameras panned to an iconic duo in the stands—former Indian captain MS Dhoni and Indian cinema’s very own Sunny Deol, casually enjoying the match. Because, honestly, what’s an Indo-Pak clash without some cinematic flair? Memes were minted, tweets were fired, and even those who had no idea about the match were suddenly very invested.

    But JioStar didn’t just rely on the match to pull in viewers—it went full throttle with a pre-game content blitz. Star Sports rolled out an engaging line-up of shows, including Thank You Pakistan…Jeetega Hindustan, featuring cricketing legends Navjot Singh Sidhu, Yuvraj Singh, Shahid Afridi, and Inzamam-Ul-Haq. Meanwhile, Follow the Blues documented India’s meticulous preparations, ensuring fans were as hyped as an IPL auctioneer on caffeine. The build-up reached fever pitch on match day, kicking off with Dil Se India at 8:00 am, setting the stage for the epic clash.

    Not to be left out, Oaksmith Cricket Live, Star Sports’ live pre, mid, and post-match show, also enjoyed its moment in the spotlight, drawing in 2.2 crore viewers who tuned in for expert analysis, insights, and, presumably, the occasional hyperbolic cricket metaphor.

    And just when you thought the drama was over, the action is far from done. With Team India still undefeated, the Men in Blue are now set to take on New Zealand in the ICC Men’s Champions Trophy 2025 final on 9 March. With another shot at glory on the line, will India lift another ICC trophy, following their T20 World Cup 2024 triumph? Fans will find out soon enough when coverage kicks off at 8:00 am across the JioStar network.

    Cancel those morning meetings, fake a cough, and restock on beers-cricket fever is about to hit like a Jasprit Bumrah yorker at 150 km/h.

  • Jana-BCCI tie up; to award bankable player from 22 Sept

    Jana-BCCI tie up; to award bankable player from 22 Sept

    BANGALORE: Janalakshmi Financial Services to award ‘Jana Bankable Player’, a People’s Choice award to be decided through tweets and online votes. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) tied up with the financial services firm as an associate sponsor.

    Jana will be the official financial services partner of the Indian cricket team besides grounds right, where the financial services firm would have visibility on the field. The agreement also gives Jana benefits of prominence in stadium branding and on-ground advertising for 68 matches in three years across the three formats.

    Ajay Shirke, honorary secretary of BCCI, said, “I am delighted to announce this three-year long association as it further strengthens our belief in India Cricket.”

    During the upcoming season with New Zealand and England cricket series announced, the marquee award will be given away to the most dependable player at the end of every match during the series. Multiple engagement opportunities have been specially created for fans to actively participate and vote for the ‘Jana Bankable Player’. The audience can vote for the bankable player through twitter using #JanaBankable hashtag or simply voting on Jan web site.

    The award will be given to the most bankable player who shows consistency and performance through the match as decided by the audience votes and commentators analysis. The winner of the award per match will be receiving a cheque of Rs 1 lakh for the upcoming New Zealand series starting on 22 September.

    Additionally, the voting fans also stand a chance to win tickets and witness the next match live from the stadium.

    “The organisation strives to be as dependable to our customers as a player is to their team,” said V.S.Radhakrishnan, CEO & MD of Janalakshmi.

    JFS is the largest and the fastest growing Micro Finance Institution (MFI) in India, that recently has been granted in-principle approval to convert itself into a Small Finance Bank.

  • Jana-BCCI tie up; to award bankable player from 22 Sept

    Jana-BCCI tie up; to award bankable player from 22 Sept

    BANGALORE: Janalakshmi Financial Services to award ‘Jana Bankable Player’, a People’s Choice award to be decided through tweets and online votes. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) tied up with the financial services firm as an associate sponsor.

    Jana will be the official financial services partner of the Indian cricket team besides grounds right, where the financial services firm would have visibility on the field. The agreement also gives Jana benefits of prominence in stadium branding and on-ground advertising for 68 matches in three years across the three formats.

    Ajay Shirke, honorary secretary of BCCI, said, “I am delighted to announce this three-year long association as it further strengthens our belief in India Cricket.”

    During the upcoming season with New Zealand and England cricket series announced, the marquee award will be given away to the most dependable player at the end of every match during the series. Multiple engagement opportunities have been specially created for fans to actively participate and vote for the ‘Jana Bankable Player’. The audience can vote for the bankable player through twitter using #JanaBankable hashtag or simply voting on Jan web site.

    The award will be given to the most bankable player who shows consistency and performance through the match as decided by the audience votes and commentators analysis. The winner of the award per match will be receiving a cheque of Rs 1 lakh for the upcoming New Zealand series starting on 22 September.

    Additionally, the voting fans also stand a chance to win tickets and witness the next match live from the stadium.

    “The organisation strives to be as dependable to our customers as a player is to their team,” said V.S.Radhakrishnan, CEO & MD of Janalakshmi.

    JFS is the largest and the fastest growing Micro Finance Institution (MFI) in India, that recently has been granted in-principle approval to convert itself into a Small Finance Bank.

  • ‘We have enough high quality relevant content to provide for each of the three channels’ : RC Venkateishi- ESPN Software India managing director

    ‘We have enough high quality relevant content to provide for each of the three channels’ : RC Venkateishi- ESPN Software India managing director

    Just when everyone was thinking that sports broadcasters might look to “de-risk” the cricket story, ESPN Star Sports has announced the launch of a dedicated cricket channel for Indian audiences. The new channel, christened Star Cricket, will commence transmission in June.

     

    Star Cricket will be making its bow with a big bang property to showcase because its launch coincides with the India tour of England that involves four Tests and seven One Day Internationals.

     

    Indiantelevision.com caught up with ESPN Software India managing director RC Venkateish in an attempt to get a feel of what was guiding this decision.

     

    Excerpts:

    Is this the right time to launch another cricket centric sports channel, particularly considering the disillusionment of the general public with the game in the country?
    Suffice to say that there is still no challenge to cricket as the single sport which has pole position in the Indian market. And I don’t see that changing anytime in the near future. So, from the perspective of timing, we really don’t think that is an issue.

     

    What is more important is the longer term picture and going forward we continue to believe that cricket will continue to hold its own and in fact strengthen as there is a lot of new talent coming in.

    Nobody’s is arguing that India will not continue to remain cricket-centric. But the fact of the matter is that for something like this to work, it has to be underpinned by high levels of interest in the domestic game as well, which is not the case in India. In fact, this is a problem that Neo Sports seems to be confronting as well.
    Which is a pity actually. In fact, if the local tournaments are properly marketed and properly packaged for the viewers, have the potential. We unfortunately don’t have the rights for that.

    Exactly, and isn’t that what Nimbus is hoping to leverage on Neo Sports. And you don’t have local Indian cricket to showcase, so what is the USP of your channel?
    What we will be showcasing in fact, apart from the international matches, is county cricket in England and domestic cricket in Australia, which also feature some of the best players in the world, including a lot of Indian players. There will also be a substantial effort to market that.

     

    In many ways we will be doing a parallel to things like English Premier League. Where it was four or five years ago to where it is today, it is really a result of the investments that we have done in promoting that property and making it interesting for the viewer.

     

    If you just pick up something and put it on the channel, it is not going to work. That is the job of marketing to popularize a particular sport. It has to be exploited and executed properly. Even the domestic Indian tournament, it needs to be put across properly to the viewer. It is not something that will happen automatically.

    There are two strands to the communication that you sent out on your upcoming channel. One is that you will showcase live India and non India cricket. You will also showcase feature programming, including reality reality shows?
    Reality shows are like we had recently Harsha ki Khoj Dream Job. That genre has lot of space. It has a lot of opportunities for us to create programming around that. We will be developing more such shows and putting them across to the viewer.

    Fair enough but the point is that now you have three platforms through which you have to transmute content. Is there enough content to go around?
    On the content side, over the last couple of years, we strengthened our cache, not just in cricket but in all other sports. We just recently renewed the English Premier League. We have the Spanish League, we have Euro 2008. Those are the big soccer properties. In tennis, we added the French Open so we now have it along with Wimbledon and the Australian. In motor sports we have Formula 1 and A1. In golf we have all the major properties.

     

    So, if you look at each and every sport and the key properties, they are all residing on our channel. Along with this, we have other smaller content also which has come on the network.

     

    As for cricket, for the next 14-16 months I have India’s tour of England, the Twenty20 World Cup, India’s tour of Australia, the Asia Cup and the Champion’s Trophy. That is five major cricketing events.

     

    So I don’t believe that we are in anyway falling short of providing high quality relevant content in each of these three channels.

    What about distribution? Right now we are in a very uncertain distribution market, both on analog as well as on digital cable, with Cas only in the beginnings of being rolled out. And in such a time you are launching a 3rd channel?
    I agree with you that there are a lot of people having trouble finding distribution. But ultimately, your bottom line is going to be content. I think we will be in a position to demonstrate it through cable and to the viewer that the content we have to showcase on the channel are of a quality that must be carried.

    Let us accept that you have great content, but today the reality of placement fees cannot be wished away. And it means that slots are booked on tunable bandwidths for one year, two years…
    I think that applies more to other genres. Unless people see your channel how will they get hooked on to it? They will not demand it. For my cricket channel, I don’t have to create a demand.

    There is the recent example of Neo Sports, which had great content but still faced distribution problems?
    The difference is that Neo Sports did not have its own distribution team.

    Well they had Star distributing them, which is as good as it can get?
    I don’t know what Neo Sports needed to do but they didn’t do, or what support they got, I don’t really want to comment on that. But as far as we’re concerned, we have the strongest distribution as well as distribution team in India, and I am completely confident that we will not have any issues with our channel.

    We have been delivering higher and higher reach and we haven’t seen the proper monies for that as yet

    That still doesn’t explain how you’re going to find place in a tunable bandwidth if all the slots are already locked in.
    In case there is a cricket match happening, he (the cable operator has to put it in the prime band. I can’t see a situation where the matches will not be shown.

    There is the option of DD, where the matches are being shown because of must carry.
    Test matches are not going to be shown on DD. I agree with you that channels tend to go up and down, especially the ones who don’t pay money to the cable operator. That is a fact.

     

    Even then, we have always managed to be there in prime band even when we didn’t have cricket running. And you must understand that in regards to sports channels there has been a certain amount of consolidation. So the other channels which don’t have relevant content tend to be pushed onto the hyper band.

     

    There will be a little bit of juggling and we will have to manage that. But as a company policy, we will certainly not pay any carriage fee or any placement fee. We are a pay channel and we will get our price.

    What rates have you fixed for the new channel?
    We haven’t announced the final rate but it should be in the region of around Rs 28 to RS 30.

    Let’s talk about the ICC cricket rights. I take you back to a comment you’d made earlier to Indiantelevision.com that the crazy escalation in rights prices will start cooling down a bit. And yet you went and plonked $ 1.1 billion for those rights?
    If you do a bit of math, you’ll see that whatever I said earlier has actually happened. Let’s benchmark it with some of the other rights. The BCCI rights, which the previous version was for $ 50 million for five years, went for $ 612 million for four years. So that’s basically an escalation of 1,400 per cent.

     

    Now take the ICC, the last ICC went for $ 550 million. So that’s basically a 100 per cent increase. And the last ICC did not have events like the Twenty20 World Cup, which have been added on this property.

     

    What we have paid over eight years, is basically a 9 per cent per annum escalation in rights fee, as opposed to some of the other properties, which in recent times have gone absolutely berserk. The BCCI, as well as the BCCI offshore cricket rights package sold to Zee for over $ 215 million ($ 219.15 million).

     

    Even if you look at things like the Sri Lanka board for $ 50 million, or the Bangladesh board, which went for $ 56 million after going for $ 6-7-8 million last time.

     

    So what we have paid for are not just the World Cups and Champions Trophies, but also what is going to develop into a real cracker of a property – the Twenty20 World Cup. Not once, but thrice.

    From an average per day cost perspective, and if we compare the three properties that went for big bucks, how does such a payout work?
    Zee paid $ 8.71 million, BCCI went for around $ 3-4 million per day and we are around the same ball park.

    There are also the cricket rights that are coming up over the next 12 months for many big territories over the next year and a half. You have already committed $ 1.1 billion for the ICC rights as well as all the other rights you’ve mopped up recently, so where do you stand on that?
    We are quite comfortable with the levels of investment we’ve made thus far and what we have identified as key acquisitions for the future.

     

    But having the ICC rights provides us a very strong backbone of cricket over the next eight years. Whatever else we add on would be accretive to what we already have so it won’t be necessary to go out and buy everything under the sun.

    What of the territories that ESS currently own – England, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa? Will you be making aggressive bids to retain them?
    We haven’t formalised how we’re going to go about it yet.

    I again come back to the disaster that was the World Cup. Everyone was expecting 2007 to be cricket’s year as far as advertising is concerned due to the sheer volumes of A list properties that are coming up throughout the year. Now will all the calculations have to be reworked?
    On this I have a different take. I think the advertisers have had it pretty good so far. I have an argument we need to push more forcefully and that is something as a broadcasting community we haven’t done enough of. The fact of the matter is all the rates that advertisers have been paying us have been on the basis of CPRP at a time when overall reach has doubled.

    But this is an argument that Star’s Paritosh Joshi has raised, as too Zee’s Joy Chakraborty. Today we are faced with a situation where HLL has pulled out its advertising from Star. And the broadcasting community does not seem to have any unity on this issue so what are we talking here?
    There is unity developing on this issue and you will see a more forceful exposition of the point in the days to come. Certainly at IBF we are all seized of it in terms of a consolidation of our position.

    We have been delivering higher and higher reach and we haven’t seen the proper monies for that as yet.

    Coming back to the development of local sport, you’ve earlier stated that Sports federations need to get their act together. One of the biggest culprits in that sense is the IHF run by KPS Gill with whom you’re a partner. One could say that it is because of the mess the IHF is in that the PHL is not taking off. So doesn’t it make sense to encourage the IHF to get itself sorted out?
    Our experience with the PHL has been very positive. There wasn’t anything in PHL that we needed to do and have not been able to do because of lack of support from IHF. Suffice to say that we are quite happy, both with the way the PHL has performed and with the kind of partnership we have with the IHF.

    But you yourself have said one reason why PHL is not taking of is because they are not performing well internationally. I think it is interlinked. If the federation was being run properly, the teams would be doing better internationally. A follows B, one could argue.
    How federations are run is not something I would like to comment on. We stand ready to help the federation in any way we can but it is not our brief to tell the associations how they are to be run. Because, quite frankly, this is something they need to work out among themselves.

  • Tata Sky reaches deal to air India cricket

    Tata Sky reaches deal to air India cricket

    MUMBAI: The Tata Sky DTH platform has reached an agreement with Neo Sports, the channel that has rights to telecast India cricket.

    An immediate fallout of this is the fact that Tata Sky subscribers will get to watch live the third ODI that kicked off in Chennai today and the subsequent matches as well.

    The remaining matches of the series will be available live on Tata Sky and in digital picture quality, a release issued by the DTH service provider states.

    Doordarshan is also showing the matches but with a seven-minute delay. The national broadcaster was allowed to telecast the matches ‘deferred live’ following a Delhi High Court ruling on dispute between Nimbus and Prasar Bharti.
     

  • ‘I forecast that in three years time there will only be two sports broadcasters who will have any kind of market share’ : Harish Thawani – Nimbus Communications chairman

    ‘I forecast that in three years time there will only be two sports broadcasters who will have any kind of market share’ : Harish Thawani – Nimbus Communications chairman

    Early this year in February, Nimbus shook up the sports broadcasting sector by bidding $ 612.8 million for the rights to India cricket. Driven by the vision of its chairman Harish Thawani, the company has just launched its cricket centric channel Neo Sports. A second channel Neo Sports Plus, which will look to converge somewhere between sports and entertainment, is soon to follow in the next few months.

    It then signed a distribution deal with Star, which besides cable is also looking at Neo Sports to push DTH. Nimbus has also put a team in place to run Neo Sports. Indiantelevision.com’s Ashwin Pinto caught up with Harish Thawani over lunch for a lowdown on the company’s plans, the importance of improving stickiness, the advertising game plan, and a possible shakeout in the sports broadcasting sector.

    Excerpts:

    These are exciting times for Nimbus. First, the acquisition of India cricket, which allows you to enter the big league. Now you will be launching two sports channels. What is the vision you have for Nimbus Sports Broadcast?
    These are exciting times for the Indian broadcasting sector as a whole. We are seeing growth rates that are unprecedented and not slowing down. The growth forecast is robust for the next three to five years. The broadcasting sector is growing faster than the economy. We are seeing 7.5 – 8.5 per cent growth rates in the economy while for broadcasting, it is growing at 17-19 per cent.

    The interesting thing is that the sports sector seems to be growing the fastest. The spends on sports, whether it is on air or sponsorship or even on leisure activities, is big. You will notice that the sales of sports products like Nike, Adidas are all up.

    It is interesting that we are entering the sports broadcasting industry at a time when new alignments, new partnerships are taking place. The industry is maturing in such a way that you can compete with one party in one segment and collaborate with them in another segment of business.

    Our distribution alliance with Star is an indication of the growing maturity of the marketplace.

    So yes, I would say that we very much look forward to the impact that Neo Sports will make, not just on the broadcasting sector but also on consumers.

    More than Neo Sports, which is obviously cricket centric, we are even more excited about seeing the impact that Neo Sports Plus will make. It will be relatively slower as cricket being a bigger driver allows Neo Sports to be the bigger channel of the two. In the medium term, which is one to two years, we will be able to see what Neo Sports Plus has been able to achieve. Preliminary research shows that there is a huge appetite for a channel that converges its programming somewhere between sports and entertainment.

    When they launch, what will the programming of Neo Sports and Neo Sports Plus look like?
    We are launching only Neo Sports first. The launch date of the other channel is yet to be firmed up. We had earlier scheduled to launch it in the second quarter of 2007 which is April – June. But I can confirm that we are likely to bring that forward. We have been able to get ready faster. It is running ahead of schedule. For Neo Sports, the momentum will start building up towards the end of December just ahead of the first major international series.

    The industry is maturing in such a way that you can compete with one party in one segment and collaborate with them in another segment of business

    ESPN Star Sports had tried a soap concept Dream Team. That did not work out. Will you be doing this kind of programming on Neo Sports Plus?
    I am not off hand familiar with what ESPN Star Sports tried. I do recall them running some internationally syndicated football show.

    If that is what they chose to do then our vision is different. We have hit upon insights that may be unique. More importantly, as a company that has produced both sports and entertainment at disparate ends with more than reasonable success, the skill sets that we bring to the table are perhaps somewhat unique. It is not just based on understanding the consumer but also being able to deliver what the consumer wants.

    To pick up the case study of ESPN Star Sports, I think that running an English language soap opera on a minority interest sport like football is perhaps not the formula for succeeding and establishing an audience that is loyal to the concept of sports entertainment. English language soap per se does not do well.

    Football, while being a global sport, still lags significantly behind cricket in India. A Hindi language football soap opera might have done better. A Hindi language cricket soap opera will do even better.

    We are not planning to do that. We will move away from the obvious and move towards the slightly more complex solutions. I hasten to add that the perception of sports entertainment is presenting sports in an entertaining manner. That is now what we are attempting to do. We are looking to converge the two.

    Could you talk about the team that is being put in place to run the channels as well as the organisational restructuring?
    Shashi Kalathil has joined as chief executive of Neo Sports. We wooed and persuaded him because of the outstanding track record he has as a senior management professional. He is said to be a great motivator and is a young CEO. His many years at Pepsi have given him unique insights into how large advertisers buy cricket. He has been on the customer end to what was then the largest buyer of sport in cricket in India.

    It was also possibly one of the top five buyers of sport worldwide.

    Traditionally the tendency of a broadcaster is to look for a domain specialist out of broadcasting. We found that we needed domain specialists from the consumer products side of things. The second advantage he brought to the table is that he has worked in a startup Aircel. A startup has its own unique set of issues to confront.

    Scott Ferguson is the Asia-wide COO. He came out of the Sky Sports system. He worked with Orbit in the Middle East. We then tried to ensure that everybody under Shashi was from the broadcasting sector. Ranjith Rajasekharan is our marketing head. He come to us from MTV. Sanjay Goyal is our VP research and planning. He came back to us from CNBC. Sunil Manocha is the ad sales head and returns to us from Mindshare.

    Sonali Rege is our head of production. She comes to us from Channel [V]. Hitesh Sabbarwal is our VP affiliate sales. He comes to us from Zoom, and before that Sony. Each one of them is a domain, sector specialist.

    Shashi is spared the headache of having a role of having to tweak the broadcasting side of things. Customer acquisition, brand focus, revenue growth are the areas that Shashi will be able to focus on without having to worry about the back office so to speak.

    Where does Digvijay Singh fit in all this?
    He runs Nimbus Sport, which is the international sports rights management agency and production company. He does not fit into Neo Sports. Interestingly enough, Nimbus Sport and Neo Sport will compete in certain segments like rights acquisition.

    They are two different, separate arms. There will be conflict between the two and why not? Star Sports is a partner with ESPN and Star India is our distribution platform.

    This is an example where a business of one company may compete with another business of the company. The theory for us is that if 10 per cent of Nimbus Sports’ profits are eaten into by Neo Sports then it is fine.

    Cumulatively, they will profit much more than one entity might have done on its own. There is also a physical separation between the two entities. One is headquartered in Singapore. One is headquartered from India. Except for rights there is nothing in common with the two. One is a service provider for the industry. The other is a product delivered to the consumer.

    Nimbus Sport may provide services to Neo Sports. Nimbus Sport is a global player in rights management while Neo Sport will only focus on acquiring India rights.

  • Nimbus signs more global broadcasters for India cricket

    Nimbus signs more global broadcasters for India cricket

    MUMBAI: Nimbus Communications Limited, the global media rights partner of the BCCI, has entered into TV licensing agreement for terrestrial broadcast of Indian cricket in Kenya, Botswana, Malawi, Namibia, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

    The company has also closed a four year deal with Super Sport, the South African pay TV service.
    Nimbus, in an official release, claimed that it worked out a comprehensive telecast strategy for the Middle East with the signing of the radio rights deal with Hum FM and the TV rights deal with Ten Sports.

    According to the official communiqué, the Sinhala ‘edutainment’ channel Derana has secured the terrestrial TV rights for Sri Lanka for the ongoing England series. The series’ non exclusive pay TV rights for Hong Kong and Sri Lanka have been acquired by Ten Sports.

    Says Nimbus VP International & Syndication Vikram Das, “We are proud to be associated with the phenomenal expansion of the reach of Indian cricket. In a very short space of time we’ve achieved outstanding results in terms of reach, revenues and platforms.”

    With the latest round of deals announced, Indian cricket is now going live onto every continent: America, Europe, Australia, Africa and Asia and is available on television, radio and internet broadband, the release adds.