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Stage set for
ICL kick off
NEW DELHI—“Twenty four runs in one ball. Jujubi (too easy),” screams a
look-alike of Tamil actor Rajinikanth from a poster outside the Tau Devi
Lal Stadium in Panchkula. Around 200 eager spectators hover around the
periphery of the ground trying to figure out what the spectacle is.
Organisers fume over last-minute preparations, emcees fret over
logistics, and the players kick up gusts of dusts practising their
direct hits. The Indian Cricket League is finally here.
“We’ve had so many spanners thrown into the works that we can’t believe
we’ve finally got so far,” says one of the organisers, heaving a sigh of
relief. Everyone hopes the opening game of the tournament, Chandigarh
Lions (with Chris Cairns, Andrew Hall, Daryl Tuffey, Imran Farhat in
their line-up) taking on the Delhi Jets (with Taufeeq Umar, Paul Nixon
in the side), attracts a good response but nobody is going to complain
if it’s Bollywood actor Kareena Kapoor’s dance show that’s whetting the
appetite. The next few days may see boundaries between sport and
entertainment blur considerably.
One of the goals of such a format, the organisers say, is to build city
pride, whatever they can rustle up in a few days. It’s of course a
different matter that the Delhi Jets has precisely one player (Abhishek
Sharma) who’s represented Delhi and the Mumbai Champs the same (Robin
Morris). Players have been grouped according to the zones they come from
and it will be interesting to see how they gel as a unit. Four or five
international stars in one side adds some spice to the mix.
What the players seem impressed about is the quality of the support
staff provided. Jock Campbell, an Australian physio, and CJ Clarke, his
countryman who trained the Sri Lankan side that reached the final of the
World Cup this year, have apparently cracked the whip during the camps.
Masseurs (women, incidentally) have assisted them. Now that’s a novel
way to lure players.
In an official launch at Chandigarh’s Taj, the organisers unveiled a
funky trophy and announced an overall prize money of 15 crores (US$ 4
million approx). It includes prize money for all teams; a team can lose
every game and still go back with INR 85 lakhs (US$ 213,000).
Jock Campbell, an Australian physio, and CJ Clarke, his countryman who
trained the Sri Lankan side that reached the final of the World Cup this
year, have apparently cracked the whip during the camps
Jazzy television coverage is expected too - GPS devices being attached
to players, displaying their heart-beat rates, body temperatures etc. A
giant screen has been installed and disco-like arrangements have been
set up on the stage. The first half-hour of all games will be shown
across all channels of the Zee network. “Switch on the TV and see what
we can do to Indian domestic cricket,” seems to be the message. There
was a suggestion that the third umpire will call no-balls but the
umpires - four first-class umpires from England - have apparently
insisted that their job remains the same.—Agencies
Rains aren’t expected but in case matches are curtailed it won’t be the
Duckworth-Lewis system being used. Instead the organisers have chosen
the Jayadevan method, an Indian version that has been trialled in
domestic competitions.
Another new rule to be enforced is that even if a batsman has made his
ground, there will be no overthrows after the ball hits the stumps in an
attempted run-out.
It’s required the organisers to overcome several hurdles, the most
interesting of these is this: the organisers were not allowed to use
BCCI-accredited equipment and needed to travel to Dehradun to ferret out
the only non-BCCI super-sopper in the country. The tournament is yet to
begin but this must surely be a candidate for the scoop of the year. |