Tag: ODI World Cup

  • Cummins eyes victory again as Carrera renews starry partnership for 2025

    Cummins eyes victory again as Carrera renews starry partnership for 2025

    MUMBAI: When you’ve got your eye on the prize, it helps to look the part. Cricket ace Pat Cummins is back in the frame literally as Carrera Eyewear extends its high-octane partnership with the Australian skipper into 2025, announcing a fresh drop from the Carrera|Pat Cummins selection ahead of schedule.

    The collaboration blends athletic grit with sporty glamour, echoing Carrera’s philosophy of bold minds and bolder moves. And with Cummins’ CV getting shinier by the over from leading Australia to ODI World Cup and World Test Championship wins, to captaining Sunrisers Hyderabad in IPL 2024 and beyond he’s not just wearing the shades, he’s embodying the brand.

    While fans wait for the next wave of his co-branded collection, Cummins is already sporting the Carrera CSport 02 model from the Carrera Sport Collection, both on and off the pitch. It’s not just eyewear, it’s a performance statement, engineered with gum nose pads, anatomically designed temples, and customisable bands that keep things locked in, even when the action heats up.

    Carrera’s latest sport drop plays in colour, taking cues from its archive and injecting vitaminic vibrance into a classic silhouette. The result? A sleek union of comfort, legacy, and locker-room-ready swag.

    It’s eyewear that doesn’t flinch under pressure much like the man wearing it. And with the 2025 cricket season gearing up, expect Pat Cummins to keep setting his sights high with Carrera along for the run-up.
     

  • ‘Twenty20 injects new life into sports broadcast’

    The sports genre will be known for four key things in 2007. Firstly, the upheaval that happened regarding cricket. Second, a breakaway initiative by the Essel Group forced the BCCI to wake up from its deep slumber. Third, a new format emerged that rejuvenated the bat and ball game. Fourth, even if cricket goes down there is no other sport to replace it.

    As regards the first point, there was a huge build up for the World Cup in March. Everyone from broadcaster Sony to marketers, advertisers had a calypso tune on their lips. Pepsi, one of the ICC’s partners, even went Gold for the event. Two matches into the World Cup and things went into free fall. India was eliminated. Information available with Indiantelevision.com indicates that Sony lost at least Rs 800 million as a result of unsold inventory. The overall loss to the economy from the World Cup debacle is believed to have been in the region of Rs. 2.5 billion.

    However, a few months later things had come full circle. This was due to two things. India won the T20 World Cup. Additionally, Twenty20, which was initially looked upon with some scepticism, proved to be a perfect fit for today’s attention-challenged youth. As a format it has proved to be a win-win situation for all parties involved – TV channels, advertisers and viewers.

    In the ultimate analysis, India’s unexpected showing in the T20 World Cup in South Africa looks like having the kind of long term impact that India’s even more unexpected victory in the 1983 ODI World Cup did.

    The biggest reaper of the T20 windfall was of course ESPN Star Sports (ESS). The T-20 success also means that ESS will get more bang for its buck that had been anticipated when it won the ICC rights late last year with a $ 1.1 billion punt.

    That apart, there is the BCCI’s ‘officially sanctioned’ Indian Premiere League, which if it takes off in the manner that IPL chairman Lalit Modi is envisaging, could well be to cricket what the Uefa Champions League currently is to soccer.

    It is worth recalling here though that it was Subhash Chandra’s Essel Group that first bet on the Twenty20 format when in April it announced the launch of its breakaway Indian Cricket League (ICL). The stated aim of the ICL, behind which Essel put in an initial investment of $ 1 billion, was to unearth talent from India and also to raise the standards of domestic cricket.

    And despite the Indian cricket board’s best efforts to ensure that the ICL remained stillborn, the fact that the inaugural tournament was staged with moderate success highlights one point. Carping apart, ICL has clearly validated itself. Suffice to say that the ICL’s calendar of five events for 2008 speaks for itself as regards Chandra’s intent to stay the course.

    What the IPL and ICL will likely do is that just as Europe is where the world’s best soccer talent congregates, the same will happen in India vis-?-vis cricket.

    The BCCI’s response to Chandra may have in initially been borne out of its outrage at the ‘temerity’ of a private body’s to take it on, but the positive fallout was that it increased the pay packet of domestic cricketers to prevent further exodus. Additionally, when it does launch its IPL, it will go that extra mile to ensure that it’s a success for all those involved in it.

    The upcoming IPL in April is structured as a franchisee-based Twenty20 Series with top international players. The likes of Russell Crowe, Shah Rukh Khan and Vijay Mallya have bid to own a team.

    Lodestar Media CEO Shashi Sinha feels that there is room for both. Also there are clients who will get in as the risk factor is less. Numbers may not be too high but they will not shoot down as was the case with the World Cup. A loyal audience is what clients will pay for as long as the price is right. Even a sixes event will work as long as it is pushed at a national level.

    As far as the rest of the sports broadcasters are concerned, 2008 will be key for Ten Sports as a host of cricket rights it has including Pakistan and Sri Lanka come up for grabs. Whether its association with Zee affects its position with cricket boards remains to be seen. Still, WWE has ensured that the channel remains steady in terms of weekly reach.