Tag: Indian Hockey Federation (IHF)

  • ‘2006 might turn out to be the year of domestic sport’

    ‘2006 might turn out to be the year of domestic sport’

    Nimbus chairman Harish Thawani holds forth on the current sports scenario in India and throws light on what 2006 may have in store for the sports broadcasters.

    The sports television market in 2005 was characterised by an phase of attrition between the federations and the television industry as a whole. That included sports right management agencies who also represent TV rights and sports broadcasters.

    You had the BCCI involved in an ongoing never ending process of awarding the rights. Eventually it failed to conclude a transaction in 2005. This process had begun in 2004.

    That kind of poor management of the federations’ responsibility has also been seen in the continued mismanagement by the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF). It seems to have successfully spiked the sport to the extent that nobody wants to show it.

    The exception is the reinvented, reformatted PHL. The characteristic of PHL should be understood from a television viewpoint. It is an apology for a professional hockey league. It violates the three fundamentals of what constitutes exciting television. Exciting television is based on a core sense of affiliation. Affiliation comes from a sense of ownership. This means that it is either city based or community based. This tends to get a following. Affiliation is with your school, then college, then city and then country. But you cannot have city named teams that are not based in those cities. They are based somewhere else and all are owned by the IHF.

    PHL’s ratings PHL proved that while hockey was considered to be a more national sport than football, which is popular in two and a half states (West Bengal, Kerala and Goa), it really pales in comparision to football. The early results that Zee Sports got for the Federation Cup, which is the least important event in the AIFF’s calendar were sensational.

    Even though only two and a half states pulled in the ratings they were still head and shoulders above what the PHL managed to get. I suspect that the NFL will see a huge momentum going for football. Despite the AIFF changing its mind 20 times over and getting less than what they could have got for the rights if they had been sensible about it they still got some serious money into the sport. Football had its first year of genuinely making some inroads into the Indian television market. It became a distant but very visible number two sport.

    Over the first three years it will be a fairly robust second sport – still distant from cricket but by 2007 we feel that football will start making its mark in more than just three states. I want to see the NFL numbers in 2006 because then we will know what the trend is. If four of five more sates start pulling in numbers we will have a powerful number two sport at a very low cost.

    Regionalisation of commentary is something that we as the producers are actively telling Zee Sports to go in for. Languages like Punjabi, Bengali will work and we can do an audio multiplex. The AIFF is working hard to improve the structure and pull in bigger teams to play. This will be important in pushing the sport past the three strongholds.

    Equally the Challenger trophy (which Nimbus Sport produced and marketed in 2005) ratings were unprecedented. A domestic tournament got an international look. The performances were great. It sold worldwide and it got an average rating of 1.2 and a peak of 2.9, which is more than what Zee gets. This indicates that domestic sport properly packaged and focused in cricket and football has an audience. 2006 might turn out to be the year of domestic sport. That might be the strongest contribution that television can make to sport as a bigger social thing.

    However, the interesting part of that is it may eventually have a deflationary impact on the price that international cricket gets when the rights of boards in different countries come up. At the end of the day there is only so much cricket you can watch. If you can take about 60-70 days of domestic cricket, 50-60 days of domestic football and make them viable combined with around 100 days of international cricket you have 250 days or thereabouts of sport between the two sports.

    This leaves very little room for international sports to make their mark in the country. This may be the ground shift that characterizes 2006. Hockey seems to be a distant dream what with the national team performing badly and PHL not pulling numbers. If the federation can manage itself well and the sporadic interest in tennis grows with Sania Mirza and Mahesh Bhupathi visible on the international circuit then we might see the emergence of a four sport market.

    Three very distant sports but having pockets of following could be the norm. The emergence of domestic sport as a staple diet to fill up the calendar with the tentpole viewership coming in international events.

    Having said that unless the Indian national football or hockey team perform consistently at an international level, cricket will stay the only sport that one can have an affiliation to. Everywhere else we are getting hammered.

    Something that stood out head and shoulders above everything of course in 2005 in sports was the poor management of awarding of sports rights. It ended on a reasonably good note for football, a poor note for hockey and a disastrous note for cricket.

    Looking forward though to 2006, obviously cricket is now being more professionally managed. It will end the television crisis.

    2006 will see the settling of the cricket rights issue and the setting of a new production standard for domestic and international cricket. The impact that DTH has on sport will be interesting. I cannot see DTH impacting sport as much as a lot of crystal ball gazers feel it will. The regulatory bar creates a problem.

    You cannot run a DTH signal in India on a live sports network because your cable operator will stop paying you. He will say “Black me out”. He will just take the signal from the DTH service provider and pump it into his cable. The monitoring mechanism, the policing mechanism is inadequate. So I do not see DTH making a significant impact. It will be interesting to see what becomes of it as and when they begin gathering subscribers. Right now the subscriber base is non existent. 300,000 for Dish TV compared to 50 million plus for cable.

    The third and other interesting aspect that we might see in 2006 is more sports themed programming. Our early experiments on Zee Sports are beginning to pay off in that area. You reduce an excessive dependence on live sporting events like live cricket. Zee Sports programmed a lot of archived material and reformatted it in interesting ways. Now ESPN Star Sports has started doing the same thing. It will force networks to be more innovative in using archived and custom built programming.

    New kinds of content: I think that we will see the emergence of sports soap operas, sports reality shows and there will be more participation from the viewer rather than just armchair viewing. It might be participatory in an armchair sense. There might be bowling contests etc. Clearly there is a social change that we have been seeing in the last two years. More youngsters are taking to sport and 2006 may see networks waking up to that opportunity as programmers like Nimbus, TWI come up with ideas and say “Let us try this”.

    Finally I see a substantial increase in the number of professional presenters and commentators who are working in the business. There will be more iconoclastic Harsha Bhogles emerging. This is because in a five sports network country the demand for talent is increasing all the time.

    Government policy: Mandatory content sharing I think is much ado about nothing. In reality the major events have always been on DD. For the last ten years DD has shown BCCI cricket at home. Even in the era when ESPN had the rights they shared the ODI rights with DD. Nimbus has been marketing ICC cricket for the last five years. We will continue to do for the next seven years. We share the World Cup and the Champions Trophy with them. So I do not see what the big hue and cry is about.

    The football World Cup has always been on DD. Fifa protects that and you do not need the Indian government to intervene. This is Fifa’s stated policy and in the new tender we are one five companies in the final round of negotiations to represent Fifa for Asian rights marketing. The tender says that you have to give feed to terrestrial networks. I think that it is for 22 matches and all highlights.

    Wimbledon and French Open tennis Grand Slams prefer to share the semi finals and finals with terrestrial television.

    I do not see Sony and Zee Sports making a noise. The noise being made by ESPN Star Sports and Ten Sports is about having to share the rights for the away matches. I do not see the big deal. I am sure that once the dust has settled on all this, DD will leave live Tests out of things. They will just show highlights. It then boils down to 12-13 ODIs that India plays in a year on an away basis. As an industry professional I am not in favour of fighting over that. Just give it to them. The bulk of it are Test matches, which are protected.

    Having said that, I think that the retrospective thing (the government has mandated) does not apply. I do not support retrospective.

    The DD Advantage: If DD has an advantage it is that they can use equal bouts of Hindi commentary with English. I saw that during the 1999 World Cup. We beat ESPN in terms of ratings. We took away a 30-40 per cent share in cable homes. The big opportunity for DD is to go into several audio streams with regional transmitters. They should have a combination of English and Hindi for the North, English and Tamil for the Tamil Nadu, English and Telugu in Andhra Pradesh. They have the regional footprints. Satellite cannot match that as it cannot multiplex eight to nine languages.

    Sports rights: As far as rights are concerned, besides BCCI, the ICC will set into process in the latter half of next year tenders for finding a marketing agency to market the rights from 2008. Fifa rights for 2007-2014 is under negotiation for Asia. Besides Nimbus Sport, there is Infront who is the incumbent, Dentsu, Wharf Cable and Sportfive.

    On the advertising front, over Rs 1000 crores (Rs 10 billion) in ad revenue will happen in 2007 which is a World Cup year. In a non World Cup year i.e. 2006, Rs 500 crores is easy for cricket to make.

    Sports Marketing: I do not think that it is an industry. We have seen IMG progressively move away from sport and go into fashion and other things. They are still the world’s number one sports marketing agency. But despite making an early entry in India they were rocked onto the back foot and lost most of their market share. They are a great organisation and have been around for 40 years. They invented the business. In the last five years though we have been ahead of them several times. We focused on trying to deliver global standards.

    Other than IMG and Nimbus, there are one-man and two-man outfits. They operate as opportunistic brokerages. They have not made investments in infrastructure, personnel. They are not willing to take the capital intensive risks that are required to succeed in the sports marketing business. For Fifa’s marketing rights rumour has it that the five parties made a minimum guarantee of in excess of $300 million. That compares with the BCCI rights which have a reserve price of $308 million.

    You need to have the appetite and the customer relationships in place to monetise deals struck. You also need a successful track record saying that you will deliver the goods.

    Production, satellite delivery skills, production expertise the whole value chain management is a fairly complex operation.

  • Cricket rights mess sends sports broadcast for a toss

    Cricket rights mess sends sports broadcast for a toss

    The sports broadcast business in 2004 will be remembered for one dominant issue. The great Indian cricket rights trick. As in it had many a twist in the tale but no denouement. The story, which is still being played out even as we move into 2005, could well give the Balaji soap factory a run for its money.

    And money is what the private broadcasters stand to lose big time if some clarity is not brought to bear, and soon, on the confounded confusion that is sports broadcast today.

    To share or not to share? That is the question

    THE major issue that cropped up in 2004 (in implication terms if not media noise), and which will probably persist in 2005, is this whole business of sharing of telecast rights with national broadcaster Doordarshan when it comes to India cricket.

    Today, the reality is that in the telecast rights domain a huge question mark hangs over any tourney that features the Indian cricket team (or should one say the BCCI squad as the Indian cricket board is arguing in the Supreme Court). And if truth be told, it makes no difference whether a series involves a traditional cricket power like Australia on the opposing side or one from Timbaktoo. As long as the Indian team is playing, the tag of “event of national import” can be applied. To understand what’s at stake a recap is in order.

    The beginning of the year and the end of the year saw two such “events of national importance”. It was in March that India embarked on a landmark and historic tour of Pakistan for which Dubai-based broadcaster Ten Sports held the exclusive telecast rights. Ten Sports was placed under an enormous amount of pressure from the government to share the terrestrial feed with DD.

    The government’s contention was that for an event like this, which was of such national importance, the Bukhatir owned broadcaster should rise above commercial considerations. And one valid point that the government did have in its favour was that had it not put its weight behind the series, there would have been no tour in the first place.

    What was not a valid extension of that reasoning however, was the stand that DD took wherein it asserted public service broadcasting credentials in refusing to pay for terrestrial rights and also tried to make a fast buck via ad sales. When Ten agreed to give its feed for the first ODI following a Supreme Court directive, DD was quick on the draw in selling airtime and inserting its own ads into the private sports broadcaster’s feed.

    That is not to say that Ten had only a hard luck tale to tell. The fact that it reportedly made Rs 1.15 billion in ad sales from the historic series speaks for itself.

    If at the start of the year it was Ten Sports that was complaining over being hard done by, at the end of the year it was rival ESPN Star Sports that was in moan mode.

    This time it was India’s visit to Bangladesh, a tour involving the lousiest Test team in world cricket, that was deemed as being of national importance (a PIL filed by an “aggrieved” party in the southern state of Kerala argued as much). And in a ruling on similar lines to one made earlier in the year by the Supreme Court in the Ten Sports Vs DD case, the Kerala High Court directed ESS to share its feed with the national broadcaster. It in fact went further and ruled that ESS should share revenues with DD in the ratio of 80:20.

    Just how farcical the whole issue has become can be gauged from the fact that DD actually made a submission before the high court that a “fair” deal would comprise Rs 10 million in minimum guarantee per one-dayer (to be paid by ESS to DD) after which a 80:20 advertising revenue share, in favour of ESS, looked okay.

    India Rights: Chandra versus Dalmiya

    Purely in terms of media noise, however, it was the controversial manner in which the BCCI’s auctioned the India rights that hogged the headlines.

    Their is a whole lot of grist for the rumour mills as to what was going on behind the scenes in this regard, but what is of material import is the end result of all the shenanigans.

    As we enter 2005 and with Pakistan’s return visit under three months away, no one can say for certain just who will get what is really the “crown jewel” of the whole four-year India rights offering.

    What is certain though is the BCCI has kissed goodbye to even the $ 260 million that was the highest bid that Subhash Chandra’s Zee Telefilms had put in when the tenders were first opened. As for the $ 308 million that was Zee’s final offer matching ESPN Star’s increased bid, there was a question mark over it in any case, with a high possibility of litigation over the extra $ 48 million.

    As for Zee, whether it will be able to welcome a new sports channel when the Pakistanis land in India is in the hands of the Supreme Court to decide on. Till then, all it has to show (or is willing to show at the moment) as regards its sports broadcast ambitions is the Zee Sports logo.

    In all this, there were two parties (three in fact) however, that had a hearty laugh at the whole mess. Pubcaster Doordarshan ended up broadcasting the Australia and South Africa Series for a pittance after the BCCI reached a compromise with it. Last heard, the BCCI has already approached DD to bid for the Pakistan tour. The other party that gained in a big way was Ten Sports which had earlier bid a paltry $ 115 million for the rights. Ten’s parent Taj Television did the production for the BCCI. Ten also strengthened its grip outside India by broadcasting the India-Australia series in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, the Middle East, Europe and South East Asia. The remaining international territories were with Sony Entertainment. The end result therefore, was that the two highest bidders were left gnashing their teeth while the other three walked off with the spoils by default.

    Initial Bids for India Rights
    Zee Telefilms $ 260 million
    ESPN Star Sports $ 230 million
    Doordarshan $ 150 million
    Sony Entertainment $ 140 million
    Ten Sports $ 115 million

    The irony in all this is that even as Dalmiya looks back on the windfall that ultimately never was, there are many who believe that the whole mess is a fallout of the clash of egos between two men used to having their way — the BCCI supremo himself and the Zee Group CMD.

    ESS still not given up on India Rights

    If the Supreme Court orders the BCCI to go in for a rebid, expect ESPN Star Sports to chase the Indian Pakistan series aggressively. There are two reasons. Firstly it is already starting to face difficulties on the distribution front.

    The other reason is that if Zee does get the rights, then a third player will get introduced into the sports broadcast equation. If that happens, then one can expect the cost of sports properties to shoot up even further. Speaking to Indiantelevision.com recently ESS Asia MD Rik Dovey said as much when he said, “I see the cost of sports rights continuing to spiral out of control. This is largely due to newcomers coming into the market and not really understanding the values within the business.”

    Uncertainty deals distribution revenues hard blow

    2004 has been a tough year for both Ten Sports and ESPN Star Sports on the distribution front. Even with India-Pakistan cricket on its menu, Ten was unable to ramp up its distribution numbers beyond 2 million nationwide, industry sources say. And the situation post-June has been even worse with collections at a virtual standstill, the sources aver.

    Ten would be hoping that 2005 sees a more settled picture. That, however, dependent in large measure on how soon it will be able to sew up its distribution distribution strategy which has been in virtual limbo post the parting of ways with Modi Entertainment (which happened after the Pakistan tour). As things stand there are three possible platforms that Ten may hop aboard — Zee-Turner, SET-Discovery or ESPN Star Sports. If none of these work out, there is the option of going it alone.

    It is on the advertising front that Ten is in far better shape. It holds the rights for cricket coming out of Sri Lanka, Pakistan, the West Indies, Sharjah and Morocco. All these are long term. It has the WWE which is allowing it to deliver far higher GRPs than ESS. This year Ten also strengthened its football line up by acquiring the rights for among others Brazilian, Argentinian, Italian, German and Portugese football.

    And what of ESS? Well, since the beginning of last year, there has been a steady erosion of subscriber base from 6.5 million then to under 4.5 million today.

    ESS is however, not letting the uncertainties of the India cricket rights prevent its moving ahead on other fronts.

    The biggest and most laudable effort, which could well yield long-term benefits, is its bid to infuse fresh life into India’s moribund hockey league. The Premier Hockey League initiative (PHL) for which it signed a 10-year telecast deal with the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) is about to kick off. The broadcaster is also looking at tennis in a big way. It recently renewed deals for the Australian Open and Wimbledon Tennis. As far as football is concerned it renewed its agreement for EPL and also signed a deal with the Asian Football Confederation. Its rights to Formula One are also a solid ad sales revenue earner.

    On the marketing front one major initiative from ESS was its efforts at increasing the level of interactivity. To give an example during the Asia Cup in July it did a mobile tie up. Subscribers of Airtel, Orange/ Hutch, Tata Indicom and Idea Cellular could call a unique number and express their views on the tournament. ESS also came out with innovations to connect the advertiser more closely with the viewers. For example there was the huddle of the Indian team during which viewers could see the Pepsi graphic.

    The interactivity also extended to soccer. ESS tied up with Nokia for the show Goals. Through the pan Asian initiative viewers could vote for their favourite goal, save or player shown during the programme.

    However the initiative that took sports marketing in India to the next level was what ESS did in May to get viewers into the Euro spirit. The broadcaster painted the metros and the trams of Kolkata with Euro images, posters, movie halls etc. Euro 2004 was positioned as ‘The biggest soccer battle’. The result was that even without including the finals, the matches reached a cumulative audience of 182 million. By comparison Euro 2000 had a cumulative audience of only 27.8 million. What also helped ESS penetrate the Hindi heartland was the fact that it introduced dual feeds in English and Hindi for key tournaments like Euro and Asia Cup. This year ESS Asia announced that it had managed a 25 per cent year on year increase in advertising revenues across the network from 1999. It attributed the achievement to the four O’s strategy which combine on air, off air, on ground and online benefits.

    DD failed to market and sell Olympics

    All this is not to say that one needs to do tons of marketing to get the ratings. The bigger the event the less the effort required. Former Max business head Rajat Jain admitted as much in an interview when he referred to Ten’s lack of marketing for the India Pakistan series other than the print medium. Despite that the broadcaster got excellent ratings.

    But a clear case of how lack of marketing and mundane promotional activities killed a potential killer application was the national broadcaster Doordarshan as regards The Olympics.

    Some facts first: When the biggest sporting spectacle aired in August DD Sports was able to more than triple its reach compared to the Sydney games in 2000. Tam data c&s 4+ showed that across the six metros the pubcaster was able to reach 18.8 million homes. In 2000, the figure stood at 5.6 million.

    No wonder Mudra’s Amit Ray which handles media planning for Reliance gushed, “Not only did we get huge visibility in non c&s homes, the average rating of Olympics were higher than tennis (both Wimbledon & US Open) even in C&S homes. Going by the above facts it proved beneficial to be on Olympics.

    “While on cricket though the popularity is beyond question we must not forget that though the 10 second price of a normal match has reached the sky it’s only one match – India vs. Pakistan which justifies that. But unfortunately people are so blinded that a similar price is being paid for matches involving teams like Bangladesh & Kenya in the disguise of a tournament!”

    One can understand why Ray would be pleased. If you get the kind of numbers that the Olympics delivered at a bargain basement price who wouldn’t be thrilled. That well sums up the story of the Olympics as far as DD’s sell strategy was concerned.

    Even though DD paid a pittance (relative to the rest of the world) in acquisition costs of Rs 240 million for the Olympics, it netted just Rs 80 million from the games. That’s a Rs 120 million loss for an event that is universally acknowledged as the greatest sporting spectacle on the planet.

    As far as other sports news was concerned sports marketing firm Total Sports Asia launched in India in September. It is the WWE’s Asian representative in terms of television rights and merchandise sale. It also organises events on behalf of the WWE. One could see the WWE come down to India next year.

    *********

    There are some lessons the government needs to take from all this. While it is all very well to continue hand holding DD on the issue of sports telecast rights, there has to be a line drawn somewhere as to what constitutes “must provide” to the state broadcaster.

    It is for the government to spell out clearly the terms under which rights issues are to be dealt with. Sports broadcast is a high investment business the world over. If broadcasters are not given guarantees that protect their investments then its a dead loss proposition. And ultimately it will be Indian sport that is the loser.

    A case in point is the Premier Hockey League (PHL) initiative. It took three years of detailing and ground work to get the whole thing going and is a long term investment that has very little scope for returns any time soon. But it is initiatives like this that can infuse life into Indian sport. For that to happen it is Big Daddy cricket that will perforce have to bankroll such efforts.

    And that will not happen if even tours like the one that India just concluded in Bangladesh are brought into the “of national importance ambit”.

    The only way out of what is at present a dead end game is to use the formula that is employed vis-a-vis the ICC Cricket World Cup. This would mean that DD is guaranteed terrestrial rights for all India cricket. But only if it pays a competitive price for it. That price could be determined by the broadcast regulator if negotiations fail to throw up a reasonable resolution.

    Secondly ALL cricket outside the country should be made offlimits for DD. Unless it is willing to enter into competitive bidding with private broadcasters for the rights that is. That would of course mean that DD would have to work towards getting returns on investments made.

    We return to the point about DD making a Rs 120 million loss (after paying just just Rs 240 million) out of an event as big as the Olympics. When you consider that this is an event that runs for over a month, it becomes even more incomprehensible.

  • PHL goes big; multi venue league to start January 02, 2007

    7 of the top PHL teams to battle for the title in a single tier PHL goes big; multi venue league to start January 02, 2007 45 matches; Best of three finals; Chennai and Chandigarh to play co-hosts

    New Delhi, October 13, 2006— Indian Hockey Federation (IHF),
    India’s apex body for hockey management, today announced big and important transformations to the third version of country’s very own Hockey league, The Premier Hockey League (PHL). The league moves in to a single tier format with the top seven teams of last year to fight for the title in a two month long tournament co-hosted by Chennai and Chandigarh. ESPN STAR Sports, which has been entrusted with the key responsibility of marketing, producing and broadcasting the hockey
    league for a period of ten years, will showcase PHL ‘LIVE’ and exclusive on its network.

    Unlike last two years where the league had two tiers with five teams each, the third edition of the PHL will have the top seven teams from the last year’s edition battling for the country’s top Hockey team. The teams have been chosen on the basis of their performance in last year’s PHL which means that in addition to the 5 Tier I teams from last year’s PHL – namely, Sher-e-Jalandhar, Chandigarh Dynamos, Maratha Warriors, Bangalore Lions and Hyderabad Sultans, the top two teams from Tier II, that is, Orissa Steelers and Chennai Veerans will be playing in the Premier division.

    The Premier division will have the seven teams play each other twice, in 42 matches, followed by a best of 3 play-off final between the top two teams in the league like last year. The total number of matches in all will be 45 and will span a period of two months.

    This edition of PHL will also see it move to a multi venue format with
    Chennai to play host for the PHL for the first month, followed by Chandigarh in the second. All matches will be under lights as before
    and will be covered LIVE and exclusive by ESPN STAR Sports.

    Speaking on the occasion, Mr. KPS Gill, President, Indian Hockey
    Federation, said, “The PHL has set new benchmarks as the world took notice of a completely new, revolutionary league with the third umpire being introduced for the first time in Indian hockey. Keeping in accordance with our innovations to make the league more interesting we have raised the competitiveness in the league. With the best seven teams from last year’s PHL playing each other, we envisage a more cut throat competition this year that will be good for Indian hockey.”

    According to Mr. RC Venkateish, Managing Director, ESPN Software India Pvt Ltd, “We have redefined hockey broadcast with PHL. The tournament has been a viewing spectacle with comprehensive match analysis, pre- match and post-match shows, bi-lingual commentary in English and Hindi. Hockey lovers across the country have loved and followed PHL for the past two years for the tournament’s novel concepts and innovations. Innovations like colored jerseys, foreign players in the domestic league, use of third umpire and now the top seven teams in the Premier Division will revolutionize hockey viewing and make PHL the most viewer friendly league in the country.

    Maurits Hendricks, the incumbent coach of the Spanish Team has been re-appointed the consultant for PHL. Maurits will provide his valuable inputs to all the participating teams during PHL. He will also be responsible for short listing foreign players for the league. “

    “We are confident that more foreign players will be seen in action this year as compared to last year. The initial feedback from the European players has been very heartening,” added Venkateish.

    SS Dasgupta, Chairman & Managing Director, LSM, said, “LSM with its in-depth knowledge of and involvement with Indian hockey is very confident that the proposed tournament will be a grand success. We are currently working on a detailed blue-print to ensure that PHL dons the look of a grand carnival. We are committed to offering an international quality experience to hockey fans – they will get the best of hockey, as well as spectator facilities inside the stadium.”

    Like last year, each game will have four quarters of 17 minutes and 30 seconds each, instead of the two halves. The winner, within the stipulated time, will get three points for each victory, while the team winning in the extra time will share the points 2:1.

    For further information, contact:
    Bhaskar Majumdar, Manager – Corporate Communications, ESPN Software India Pvt. Ltd
    Mobile: 9811194244, Email: bhaskarm@espnstar.co.in Or Tarundeep Singh, IPAN at 9811017310, 011- 42492100,
    Email: tarundeep.singh@ipan.com
    For the latest schedules and programme information visit
    www.espnstar.com For more news on Premier Hockey League visit
    www.premierhockeyleague.com

  • PHL goes big; multi venue league to start January 02, 2007

    7 of the top PHL teams to battle for the title in a single tier PHL goes big; multi venue league to start January 02, 2007 45 matches; Best of three finals; Chennai and Chandigarh to play co-hosts

    New Delhi, October 13, 2006— Indian Hockey Federation (IHF),
    India’s apex body for hockey management, today announced big and important transformations to the third version of country’s very own Hockey league, The Premier Hockey League (PHL). The league moves in to a single tier format with the top seven teams of last year to fight for the title in a two month long tournament co-hosted by Chennai and Chandigarh. ESPN STAR Sports, which has been entrusted with the key responsibility of marketing, producing and broadcasting the hockey
    league for a period of ten years, will showcase PHL ‘LIVE’ and exclusive on its network.

    Unlike last two years where the league had two tiers with five teams each, the third edition of the PHL will have the top seven teams from the last year’s edition battling for the country’s top Hockey team. The teams have been chosen on the basis of their performance in last year’s PHL which means that in addition to the 5 Tier I teams from last year’s PHL – namely, Sher-e-Jalandhar, Chandigarh Dynamos, Maratha Warriors, Bangalore Lions and Hyderabad Sultans, the top two teams from Tier II, that is, Orissa Steelers and Chennai Veerans will be playing in the Premier division.

    The Premier division will have the seven teams play each other twice, in 42 matches, followed by a best of 3 play-off final between the top two teams in the league like last year. The total number of matches in all will be 45 and will span a period of two months.

    This edition of PHL will also see it move to a multi venue format with
    Chennai to play host for the PHL for the first month, followed by Chandigarh in the second. All matches will be under lights as before
    and will be covered LIVE and exclusive by ESPN STAR Sports.

    Speaking on the occasion, Mr. KPS Gill, President, Indian Hockey
    Federation, said, “The PHL has set new benchmarks as the world took notice of a completely new, revolutionary league with the third umpire being introduced for the first time in Indian hockey. Keeping in accordance with our innovations to make the league more interesting we have raised the competitiveness in the league. With the best seven teams from last year’s PHL playing each other, we envisage a more cut throat competition this year that will be good for Indian hockey.”

    According to Mr. RC Venkateish, Managing Director, ESPN Software India Pvt Ltd, “We have redefined hockey broadcast with PHL. The tournament has been a viewing spectacle with comprehensive match analysis, pre- match and post-match shows, bi-lingual commentary in English and Hindi. Hockey lovers across the country have loved and followed PHL for the past two years for the tournament’s novel concepts and innovations. Innovations like colored jerseys, foreign players in the domestic league, use of third umpire and now the top seven teams in the Premier Division will revolutionize hockey viewing and make PHL the most viewer friendly league in the country.

    Maurits Hendricks, the incumbent coach of the Spanish Team has been re-appointed the consultant for PHL. Maurits will provide his valuable inputs to all the participating teams during PHL. He will also be responsible for short listing foreign players for the league. “

    “We are confident that more foreign players will be seen in action this year as compared to last year. The initial feedback from the European players has been very heartening,” added Venkateish.

    SS Dasgupta, Chairman & Managing Director, LSM, said, “LSM with its in-depth knowledge of and involvement with Indian hockey is very confident that the proposed tournament will be a grand success. We are currently working on a detailed blue-print to ensure that PHL dons the look of a grand carnival. We are committed to offering an international quality experience to hockey fans – they will get the best of hockey, as well as spectator facilities inside the stadium.”

    Like last year, each game will have four quarters of 17 minutes and 30 seconds each, instead of the two halves. The winner, within the stipulated time, will get three points for each victory, while the team winning in the extra time will share the points 2:1.

    For further information, contact:
    Bhaskar Majumdar, Manager – Corporate Communications, ESPN Software India Pvt. Ltd
    Mobile: 9811194244, Email: bhaskarm@espnstar.co.in Or Tarundeep Singh, IPAN at 9811017310, 011- 42492100,
    Email: tarundeep.singh@ipan.com
    For the latest schedules and programme information visit
    www.espnstar.com For more news on Premier Hockey League visit
    www.premierhockeyleague.com