MUMBAI: Star Sports has appointed Rajiv Mathrani as its new chief marketing officer (CMO), a source close to the development has confirmed to Indiantelevision.com. Mathrani joined Star Sports on 17 September 2018. In his last gig, he worked as chief brand and online officer at Airtel, where he led the transformation of the telecom giant into a digital services player.
In a career spanning close to two decades, Mathrani has worked with top companies including Pepsico, GlaxoSmithKline, Citibank and Marico Industries. He was a creative consultant for a brief period of three years, before returning to the corporate world as vice president marketing at Pepsico in 2010. He was elevated to Pepsico senior director – snacks category head in 2014.
Mathrani holds a PGDBM in marketing from XLRI Jamshedpur.
In a recent development, Star had expressed displeasure with regards to Virat Kohli’s absence from Asia Cup. The broadcaster wrote an email to ACC game development manager Thusith Perera, stating how Kohli’s absence will impact the financial aspect of the coverage. The broadcaster wrote that it will impact their ability to monetise and generate revenue for the tournament.
Responding to the email, BCCI, however, in a sharp reply to ACC has made it clear that neither it nor broadcasters have any say in national team selection matters.
MUMBAI: Star Sports’ Select Dugout commentary panel for the Unimoni Asia Cup 2018 brings together an illustrious line-up of cricket experts with two debutants – Former captain of New Zealand – Stephen Fleming and one of cricket’s modern great’s batsman Mahela Jayawardene. Riding on the wave of popularity that the #SelectDugout received during its debut in VIVO IPL 2018, the experts now are ready to change the way ODI commentary is brought to the fans with audio and visual analysis focused on the key aspects of the matches throughout the tournament.
Speaking about his commentary debut on the #SelectDugout panel for the Unimoni Asia Cup 2018, Mahela Jayawardene said, “I had the opportunity to experience the commentary on Select Dugout during the VIVO IPL 2018 and I was truly amazed by the way it was reimagined to keep the fans ahead of the game. Cricket is evolving and the Select Dugout is at the forefront of changing the way commentary is consumed.
He further added, “I am excited to make my debut on the Select Dugout panel and I am looking forward to team up with some of the legends of the game such as Stephen Fleming, Anil Kumble, Dean Jones, Scott Styris, Zaheer Khan and others to bring the best of action and neighborhood banter.”
Fans will be able to enjoy the Select Dugout with experts like Stephen Fleming, Mahela Jayawardena, Dean Jones, Brett Lee, Scott Styris, Mike Hesson, Zaheer Khan, Anil Kumble, VVS Laxman and Graeme Smith.
In addition to the Select Dugout, World Feed and Hindi Feed will keep fans actively engaged throughout the Unimoni Asia Cup 2018 as fans get the option to choose how they want to enjoy their cricket.
MUMBAI: Star Sports, India’s leading sports broadcaster announces the launch of the national campaign for season VI of VIVO PKL. The campaign speaks the language of Indianess, bravery and fitness, that is core to kabaddi. The truly Indian sport epitomises bravery, when a raider enters the court to challenge seven opposition players. It makes a strong statement that only the fittest can conquer and the campaign brings to the forefront these attributes that are intrinsic to the sport.
In India, kabaddi has been a great childhood sport, however, professionally it is no child’s play. Arising from this insight, the creative adaptation of the campaign ‘BACCHPAN KA KHEL HAI, BACCHO KA NAHI’ builds on the key insight that the homegrown sport is a part of our collective childhood, a local sport we played as kids in every nook and corner, however, to play at VIVO PKL you need to be the best.
The campaign film depicts the insight with impeccable cinematic display, portraying the daily regime followed by players and the tireless hours that go into training, to excel on the mat. Every player that approaches the mat trains differently, the film opens with Pardeep Narwal who is seen running and then moves into other players Rishank Deavdiga, Anup Kumar and Monu Goyat who are training their best to prove themselves this season. The players through the film depict the sheer dedication, skill, physical and mental grind that goes into playing the sport.
Commenting on the launch of the campaign for the sixth season of VIVO Pro Kabaddi, a Star Sports spokesperson, said, “VIVO Pro Kabaddi has taken a homegrown sport to new heights of fervour and popularity. The Season VI campaign, focuses on the skill, dedication and rigour required to play the sport. Kabaddi is tough and played by some of the bravest and fittest athletes today. The film takes you through their everyday journey as they prepare for the upcoming season.”
The category defining sporting league has transformed Kabaddi in India, raking in record viewership figures and laying the groundwork for the phoenix like rise of India’s home-grown sport across the globe. With the onset of Season VI, VIVO Pro Kabaddi is all set to get bigger, better and more engaging than ever before. Beginning in early October, the league will travel across 13 host cities and will culminate in Mumbai. The 12 teams have been divided into 2 zones of 6 teams each, where each of them will be playing 15 intra zone and 7 inter- zone matches prior to the play offs. The play offs stage will comprise of 3 action-packed qualifiers and 2 eliminators scheduled to take place in Kochi and Mumbai.
MUMBAI: India’s sport of kabaddi has grown leaps and bounds with the growth of India’s flagship kabaddi league, Vivo Pro Kabaddi League (PKL). Encouraging the growth of the sport amongst the younger generation, Star Sports has begun the second season of KBD Juniors. The tournament will have 24 schools across 12 cities, and 3,500 students between the age group of 11 to 12 years battle it out to make it to the grand finale.
Season two of KBD Juniors will be broadcast on Star Sports and Hotstar during season six of PKL.
In season two, 24 schools are divided into eight groups of three teams who will play against each other. From each group, the team finishing first will then make it to the round of city finals, which will take place during the home leg of each city as part of PKL and then the national finals.
The first season of KBD Juniors was won by South Point World School, Sonepat.
The 24 participating schools include Ryan International School Goregaon, N M Joshi Marg Municipal School, St. Lawrence High School, RST Madhyamik Vidyalaya Govandi, St Xaviers High School Airoli, Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Municipal UP, English School Worli among others.
MUMBAI: A month before the sixth season of Vivo Pro Kabaddi League (PKL) will begin on 5 October 2018, Star Sports has announced Vijay Sethupathi, the Tamil superstar and Makkal Selvan, as the face of th sport in Tamil Nadu. Sethupathi will lead the Kabaddi fans in the stadium, in Tamil Thalaivas’ colors cheering from the stands.
Announcing Sethupathi’s association with Vivo Pro Kabaddi, a Star Sports spokesperson said, “After an extremely successful season five, with record viewership numbers and inspiring stories, Vivo Pro Kabaddi has proved to be the boost kabaddi needed. With the home team Tamil Thalaivas, the affinity for kabaddi in the region has grown multifold, and today we are glad to bring on board Vijay Sethupathi as the face for VIVO Pro Kabaddi in Tamil Nadu. We are happy to have Vijay partner with us in the region to build a deeper affinity for the sport in Tamil Nadu. Fans can tune-in to Star Sports 1 Tamil for 3 months of action packed kabaddi extravaganza in their own language.”
The franchise has planned a year-round initiative to spread local love for the sport across the state. Corporate Kabaddi fest was one of the initiatives which were held last month in Chennai.
Ecstatic with his new role, Sethupathi said, “I am very happy to be a part of the Vivo Pro Kabaddi family for the tournament in Tamil Nadu. Kabaddi has a rich history in Tamil Nadu and I am glad that our own sport has now reached such astounding heights. It gives me immense happiness to be a part of a sport deeply entrenched in all of us. I will be at the stadium for the opening leg, cheering for the Thalaivas. IdhuNammaAatam.”
The Thalaivas led by their verstaile captain Ajay Thakur, will take the mat on 5 October in their dazzling new colors of blue and yellow. The new jersey design also marries the rich traditional legacy of Tamil Nadu with the new age hub the state is today.
The Tamil Thalaivas will renew their Deccan Rivalry with Telugu Titans in the season opener on 5 October. That game will be followed by games against Patna Pirates (6 October), U.P. Yoddha (7 October), Telugu Titans again (9 October), Bengaluru Bulls (10 October) and Bengal Warriors (11 October) on last day of the Chennai leg of the league.
MUMBAI: The Unimoni Asia Cup 2018 promises to be an unparalleled cricketing spectacle as India’s leading sports broadcaster – Star Sports, offering fans dedicated programming starting September 2nd leading up to the highly anticipated tournament of neighbours from the Asian subcontinent.
The list of special programming includes, Follow the Blues, Star Sports’ flagship property. An exclusive show for cricket fans around the world to follow their favourite men in blue and follow their off-field journey in a never seen before avatar. For Unimoni Asia Cup, three special episodes will be aired on September 16th, 23rd and 30th respectively.
In addition to the Follow the Blues, riding on the success of the surround programming for VIVO IPL 2018, Star Sports has curated a host of other non-live and surround programming for the upcoming Unimoni Asia Cup.
‘OPENING SPELL’ – NON-LIVE SHOWS TO BE BROADCAST BETWEEN 8AM TO 10AM
(Shows to be broadcast on SS1 Hindi and SS First)
• GAME PLAN – PADOSI SE PANGA: Expert from each team, does a SWOT for their respective teams / team focus shows
• CRICKET COUNTDOWN: Shows based on performances in Asia cup across teams (Close finishes/ Upsets/ Records/Celebrations/Performances/Moments)
• BEST OF ASIA CUP: Stories capturing the drama and excitement of key Asia Cup Matches –
• Theme 1- The best of India vs Pakistan in the Asia Cup
• Theme 2- Legends of Asia
• Theme 3- Close encounters
• Theme 4- Rise of Afghanistan
• Theme 5- Rivalry
• INDIA VS PAKISTAN SPECIAL: The best encounters between India and Pakistan over the years.
• SLEDGE HAMMER: Best of Sledging Moments between the Asian neighbours
• FRENEMIES: 3 episodes showcasing conversation between 2 players talking about their rivalry moments and camaraderie during competitive cricket
MUMBAI : Star Sports, the official broadcaster of the Unimoni Asia Cup has unveiled a new TVC as part of the ongoing #KnockThemOut campaign. The tournament scheduled to begin on 15th September will see Asian neighbours take on each other.
Star Sports’ latest TVC, designed for India v Pakistan clash scheduled on 19th September, is a tongue-in-cheek take on how both the teams view each other as their fiercest on-field rival. Historically, India vs Pakistan cricket matches across formats have created some great significant moments, making it one of the biggest sporting rivalries in the world. Staying true to it, and with a twist on an age-old ‘Neighbourhood Rivalry’, the film pits Omi Vaidya who plays the ‘Pange waala padosi’ and Naveen Kasturia who plays a newly moved in neighbour against each other. The two neighbours, a clever metaphor for the two teams, try to knockout each other during the course of the TVC making the Unimoni Asia Cup 2018 the quasi-battleground on which these two neighbours would want to settle scores and emerge triumphant.
The defending champions India will start off their campaign against the winner of the Asia Cup qualifier on 18th September before taking on their arch-rivals Pakistan on 19th September. The tournament guarantees a riveting battle for the Asian supremacy between these neighbours. Interestingly, given the format of the tournament, fans may witness possibly 3 India-Pakistan clashes in the tournament.
Fans can catch the Unimoni Asia Cup 2018 live on the Star Sports Network and Hotstar.
MUMBAI: When it comes to sporting events, Star India and its sports bouquet Star Sports, has been at the forefront for the last couple of years. Event after event has been bagged by the network, beating not just broadcasters but even the likes of Facebook.
Shifting away from cricket, focus on other sports has grown in recent times. But yet, cricket remains important. This Asia Cup, Star Sports is very bullish about regional languages and plans to increase its reach by launching a couple of channels more in Kannada, Telugu and Marathi languages.
The sports bouquet of Star India has increased to 13 channels with the recent announcement of Star Sports 3 launching on 15 September 2018. With the growth of football, it sees merit in dedicating much of the new channel for it.
Indiantelevision.com caught up with Star Sports CEO Gautam Thakar to talk about its plans for Asia Cup and the upcoming tournaments. Though he is all smiles with the response from advertisers, the aim is still to drive up regional areas as well as overall consumption.
Excerpts:
With Asia Cup just around the corner, do you have any specific technological innovation?
I don’t know whether you can call it specific for Asia Cup but a couple of things we learnt from IPL, we want to expand on. Some are possible some are not. Certainly, we feel really good about the regional agenda, getting into languages because it did two-three things to us and I’m using IPL as a reference because it was most recent, partly because it was the most extensive coverage anybody has done and I also joined just before the IPL.
What it does for us is it increases engagement because it’s just more familiar in the language but it has also broadened audiences. So a lot of people, particularly in the south, have written to us saying ‘My mom can also watch the IPL now and I don’t have to bother explaining to her everything because it’s easy’. That is something that we want to continue in Asia Cup and beyond.
Our ambition is to have as many languages as possible over the next two-three years. Certainly, we think Kannada and Telugu will be our first forays, depending on licences from the ministry. But there is no doubt that we want to continue our regional investment.
Asia Cup is a very short duration tournament, so we would prefer to have our own channels to show it extensively as opposed to IPL for where we showed a bit on some GEC and movies channels. In a short two-week window it is less obvious that we can build up habit very quickly. Unfortunately, we won’t do it for the Asia Cup. The tournament will be in Tamil, Hindi and English for which we have three channels.
As the language agenda evolves, every sport that we have, we will put in as many languages. The Select Dugout that we did during the IPL, we will have that for the first time for the ODI format. Now one of the things that our core viewers appreciated was that experts were demonstrating what worked or didn’t work.
By design, we have limited advertising on that particular format and with one-day international, it gives us more time to explain from a cricketing sense both strategy and predictive nature of what will happen. So we think that is something we want to continue to do.
From a Hotstar perspective, ‘WatchN’Play’ was a strong engagement driver. People who played the game online instead of just watch were 2X the number of people who didn’t play the game. We feel that gamification is something that we want to continue to invest in as we go. At this point in time, I think there is so much in the cricket calendar that in fact, this is our biggest year. Asia Cup is followed by India West-Indies tour and after that we have Women’s T20 World Cup, India tour of New Zealand and there are other things but from Star India’s perspective, it is Australia coming to India then IPL followed by World Cup. So we have a continuous nine-month cricket calendar which means that from the marketing perspective and the category building, sports consumption, relative to more developed markets, is still low. It is massive in absolute minute terms but percentage wise it is still growing. Now any given week of the year there is some cricket activity.
After Asia Cup finals we have ISL starting from 29 August 2018. There is a nice build up that we can move the audiences there. PKL will start from 5 October 2018.
I was speaking to somebody last week and he said, from the advertising perspective it is good, because of Diwali season, which is great. But we think the world is changing and seasonality is going away a little bit. IPL which happens in March, April and May period, traditionally it is not the advertising period but it is the biggest sporting advertising property in a year.
Asia Cup will kick it off for us but kabaddi and football added will be three big pillars. There are a bunch of sports we have invested in but these three are the big drivers of growth.
If we talk about advertising, especially because you were in America before this, for a marquee sports property like a Superbowl they make the Superbowl ads. We don’t have that sort of facility. Can a broadcaster play a role in facilitating that?
In the US, as you know Superbowl has been on for a long time and this has built-up. It is like high points of the year and there is a lot of social viewing and from the advertising perspective, people actually take pride in what they have created and are very expensive. Some of the ads only air at the time of Superbowl and they spend millions of dollars doing that, but it breaks through the clutter and gets them virality.
The broadcasters can play some role but ultimately marketing professionals need to drive that agenda. We had Re-imagine awards for IPL, it was the first time we were doing it but the idea behind that was to spur the marketing community to think of the IPL in a different way and create advertising for the IPL. We will do the awards every year now to showcase what is the best advertising. In our own little way we are trying to enable it but ultimately the marketers need to embrace it.
What are the challenges in building momentum for a short format tournament like Asia Cup?
There is not much of a challenge to build momentum for Asia Cup. The challenge I was speaking about was about a channel which is not a sports channel because if it airs on a movie channel it takes time before people watch.
Asia Cup this time has a likelihood of having three India versus Pakistan games. We are not seeing Asia Cup as a challenge at all. In fact, advertiser interest is very strong and a lot of it is driven by India versus Pakistan. The challenge comes when the tournament is short and it is a new sport.
Kabaddi is no longer a new sport. In fact, it is the second biggest sport that we have. Imagine if kabbadi was only a two-week event, by the time you get into it, it’s over. Even football is the world’s number one game and is growing nicely in India but there are still a few years before it scales up. ISL being extended over a period of time allows people enough opportunity to get into the game. Because the real challenge in leagues, if they are very short, is that a lot of interest is driven by team affinity and you need some time to build the rivalry, the team support and things like that.
Now the way we consume cricket is changing because of T20 cricket, shorter attention spans of fans. So in a 50-overs format, what is your vision for interactivity and how do you try and keep the viewers glued to the screens as long as possible?
At the end of the day, we as broadcasters can do a few things in terms of quality of our coverage, ultimately the quality of the game is what drives the biggest interest. The way we think about it is two or three things. One is the Hotstar team is doing a lot of things to figure out how to have gamification.
The other thing is audience profiling over time. If you think about what we tried as an experiment in the IPL, the dugout worked well.
During this IPL season, we used something called Piero technology which dimensionalises action on the field in terms of data.
Ultimately, the quality of cricket and the rivalry between different nations is the biggest factor driving engagement. While the first campaign “Knock Knock” was based on the creative insight that one’s neighbour’s success will always be a consistent reminder of their own failure, the second TVC “Pange Wala Padosi” on the fact that the strongest of rivalries occur between neighbours, or in this case India and Pakistan. The commercial showcases Bollywood actor Omi Vaidya who plays the role of the ever challenging or ‘Pange Wala’ Neighbour – highlighting the tongue-in-cheek rivalry that stems between neighbours.
Another idea we are thinking about is, how we get fans to engage with this #knockthemout theme. Fans could give their advice to the Indian team to knock the neighbours out and we will relay it on the TV. Some of it could be in jest and some could be serious advice. We haven’t yet figured out the way to show it on the TV.
Will you be using Star Sports 3 to telecast Asia Cup because the channel is launching on the same date?
We are not yet sure, but the big part of the launch will be with ISL. We think that football is starting to grow in the country and it might merit a channel that large proportion of it should be football. It is not dedicated as a football channel but it is largely football.
We had our plans ready for Star Sports 1 Kannada, unfortunately, we couldn’t get it through the process. We are working on the formalities which need to be done. Kannada and Telugu will be top of the list. Bengali and Marathi are other interesting markets. After all these, the only remaining is Malayalam which is a very football heavy market and so the question would be, do we require a full channel for it?
How do you innovate coverage for your regional audience?
One is at a very basic level which is commentary. It is easier to hear Telugu if you are Telugu speaking native. Another thing that we have for most of the tournaments is unilateral cameras, which means we have a camera dedicated to that channel. Even in the IPL, when we were showing RCB and MI match, we focussed one camera on Bangalore players or fans and their reactions and cut to more coverage of that in the actual feed. The world feed will be what it is but 20 per cent of the coverage will be dedicated to the local feed. The third thing is every state has a flavour and we haven’t got it fully right yet.
How many advertisers do you have on board for Asia Cup?
Some brands which we have on board are Coca-Cola, Dream11, Hero Motors, Byju’s, Google, Nerolac, Britannia, Kajaria, Domino’s, Apollo, Cars24, Unimoni etc. One advantage of a short format tournament with a few big games is that there is a lot more demand and we have to actually manage some demands, particularly for the big games. Actually, advertising is the easiest thing for the tournament like the Asia Cup with big marquee games like this.
We think India is on the cusp of growth from a sporting perspective, still small relative to the world but growing fast now. We think Hotstar is adding a lot of value and incremental consumption, so how do we better coordinate TV and digital and make the experience more seamless. It is a hard place for advertisers not to be.
Do you have scope of more brands coming in?
There are different properties – one is advertising spots then there is some various sponsorship opportunity. So there are enough to do but we try to keep some amount of category exclusivity. There are some categories coming up which are very sports relevant but historically have not been as big as food and drinks. This category is a massive sporting property from an advertiser perspective for all sports and it’s only now starting to take off in India.
How would you manage the Select Dugout feed for 50 overs in Asia Cup?
That’s actually the interesting concept and problem we are talking about right now. The way we are thinking about it is that even in the three hours game the experts’ reactions were that they didn’t get enough time to show some of the nuances. It will be a little bit of an experiment because it is the first time for an ODI format. I think between now to IPL and the World Cup we want to perfect both of these offerings for ODIs and T20Is so by that time we have a higher consumption programming.
MUMBAI: India’s sport of Kabaddi has grown leaps and bounds with the growth of India’s flagship kabaddi league, VIVO Pro Kabaddi. Encouraging the growth of the sport amongst the younger generation, Star Sports announces the second season of KBD Juniors. Season 2 will be hosted across the 12 Vivo Pro Kabaddi Season VI cities. The tournament will have 24 schools per city, and 3,500 students between the age group of 11 to 12 years battle it out to make it to the grand finale.
Kabaddi requires nimble footwork of a boxer, the strength of a wrestler, tactical acuity of a chess player, agility and reflexes of a gymnast and endurance of a runner. Keeping this spirit of Kabaddi alive amongst the younger generation, KBD Juniors Season 2, will be bigger and better as the invitation to participate in the tournament was shared with multiple schools and 288 schools will participate this season, an advancement from the 96 schools that participated in season 1.
Building on the success of Season 1, that registered an impressive cumulative reach of 156.4 million viewers over the season, and had South Point World School from Sonipat win the title, Season 2 is now back to crown new glory. To ensure maximum participation from schools across the 12 cities, the invitational tournament has been designed as city qualifiers, city finals and national finals.
The city qualifiers, scheduled to be hosted between end of August and early September, as the run up to Season VI of VIVO Pro Kabaddi. 24 schools are divided into 8 groups of 3 teams who will play against each other. From each group, the team finishing first will then make it to the round of city finals, which will take place during the home leg of each city as part of Season VI of VIVO Pro Kabaddi and then the National finals.
The city qualifiers began today in Hyderabad, where the new participating schools include, Scholars International School, Oxford Grammar School, Nampally Vyayamshala High School, Lotus School, Manikonda, among others. Hyderabad Public School, Gitanjali Senior School and VV Govt school had participated in KBD Juniors Season 1 and P. Obul Reddy Public School won the city finals.
KBD Juniors targeted at young students will offer the benefits of an incredible sport to youngsters across these cities and will help grow the popularity for India’s indigenous sport. To prepare the schools for the tournament, Star Sports along with Mashal Sports Pvt. Ltd., the league organisers also provide initial training to the PE teachers in each school via an introductory kit along with coach meet and greets.
The season 2 of KBD Juniors will be broadcast on Star Sports and Hotstar during Season VI of VIVO Pro Kabaddi. The broadcast schedule for the matches will be released at a later date.
MUMBAI: The Unimoni Asia Cup 2018 is all set to commence from 15 September and will see Asian neighbours – India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan – fight for the trophy. Star Sports, the official broadcaster, has released its first film for the tournament which speaks of the unique aspect of ‘The Tournament of Neighbours’ and this very aspect is at the heart of the campaign.
Star Sports’ “Knock Knock” campaign is based on the creative insight that one’s neighbour’s success will always be a consistent reminder of their own failure. Star Sports creative communications team is the mind behind this campaign. Nirvana Films has produced the campaign.
The tournament’s title sponsor Unimoni is a global provider of money transfer, foreign exchange, payments and credit solutions with the global head quarters in UAE.
The film subtly takes on the age old “Neighbour vs Neighbour” rivalry, and brings alive the neighbourhood rivalry in a way which is bound to leave viewers with a smile on their faces.
Talking to Indiantelevision.com Star Sports CEO Gautam Thakar said, “For the Asia Cup, the channel will have the game in English, Hindi, Tamil and a different Dugout commentary. We have applied for licenses for regional languages. Our plans are ready and as soon as we get the approval we will launch the channels.”
Star India has already sent the request to Ministry of Information and Broadcasting for permission of regional language channel, Star Sports Kannada. If the channel gets the approval the Kannada audience might also get to see the matches in their local language.
“Asia Cup kicks off the cricket calendar for us, we have learnt many things in the past six months, particularly regional languages, which proved really successful in the recently concluded IPL and we are planning to do more throughout this year as the tournaments evolve. On the other hand, the Select Dugout was a novel innovation which I think a lot of the serious cricketing enthusiasts enjoyed. We are going to have that in Asia Cup for the first time. We will be using the same technology as used in the IPL,” he added.
The tournament is scheduled to be held in Dubai from September 15 to 28. Nine Star Sports screens will telecast the tournament as well as Hotstar. This year, the Unimoni Asia Cup will have a few nail-biting matches between India and Pakistan, as they compete with each other in a bid to reinstate their country’s cricketing prowess.