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Stage set for
IPL opening
BANGLORE—Even the official communication from the organisers speaks of
April 18 as D-Day, and you can rest assured that it has nothing to do
with the Normandy beaches and the heroes of June 6, 1944. After months
of hype, auctions, billion-dollar TV-rights deals and the threat of a
media boycott, the Indian Premier League (IPL) is poised to emerge from
the chrysalis.
One of the first things you see going into the Chinnaswamy Stadium just
after 4pm on Thursday is a svelte figure gliding across the outfield in
balletic fashion, waving a white scarf as she moves from long-off to
deep extra-cover. One of her compatriots tiptoes across the grass in the
opposite direction, a white parasol in her hand. A third is wearing long
black gloves more appropriate for The Age of Innocence than a Bangalore
summer. All of them will be part of an elaborate opening ceremony on
Friday evening, along with the most unusual sight.
More than a decade after Billy Corgan and the Smashing Pumpkins sang to
us of a Bullet with Butterfly Wings, the IPL’s first venue will witness
stilt-walkers striding round the ground flapping flowing capes that
feature the home team colours, red and yellow. Under lights, they’re
likely to look like gigantic butterflies straight out of a scene from
Pan’s Labyrinth. There are huge cables connecting the stadium roof to
the playing square, with a giant bubble and acrobats also part of an
opening ceremony that’s leaving nothing to entertainment chance. For the
first time in their lives, Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly, former India
captains and now rival skippers in the IPL, will walk out for the toss
in a stadium plunged into darkness.
Minutes after a “short, sharp and sweet” opening ceremony to launch the
inaugural edition of the Twenty20 tournament, the organisers are
planning to switch off the floodlights before the first match between
Dravid’s Bangalore Royal Challengers, the hosts, and Ganguly’s Kolkata
Knight Riders, the visitors, which begins at 2000 local time. “Then, the
spotlights will come on, and focus on the two skippers as they walk out
for the toss,” Charu Sharma, the Royal Challengers’ chief executive,
told.
“We are pushing to have the toss under spotlights and are waiting for
permission from local authorities, considering the number of people who
will be there at the stadium when the lights will be switched off. This
is something that has not really been tried before,” he said. After the
toss, a couple of players from the fielding side will be “miked up” to
chat directly with the TV commentators during the match. “Another
attraction for the TV audience, but this has been done before, I guess,”
Sharma said.
However, the “most poignant moment” of the 45-minute opening ceremony
starting at 1830, Sharma said, would be when all the captains gather
mid-pitch to jointly read out a pledge reaffirming the IPL’s faith in
the spirit of cricket. “There will also be speeches by Ray Mali, the ICC
president, Sharad Pawar, the BCCI president, and Lalit Modi, the IPL
chairman.” The rest of the ceremony will be a “slick” blend of
fireworks, the stilt walkers, aerial gymnasts, performers in the bubble
suspended over the ground and some Bollywood glitter with the presence
of Shah Rukh Khan, also the co-owner of the Kolkata team, and Preity
Zinta, co-owner of the Mohali franchise. “Shankar-Ehsan-Loy (the
Bollywood music directors) will be the central performers who will keep
the crowd enthralled throughout the ceremony even as the other
performers go through their acts,” Sharma said.
Bangalore is also banking on 12 cheerleaders from the Washington
Redksins, the ‘First Ladies of American Football’, to draw more fans to
the stadium. “The entire exercise is to have the right balance of
glamour and cricket,” said Sharma. “Usually, cricket is not associated
with such ceremonies, and this will be a novelty. At the same time, we
would not want the genuine cricket fan to get frustrated waiting for the
game to start. Our aim is to present a spectacle that’s short, sharp and
sweet, which reflects the spirit of the IPL.”
The Bangalore franchise, owned by business tycoon Vijay Mallya, is
playing a key role in organising the opening ceremony on their home
ground in association with the Karnataka State Cricket Association and
the IPL. On the eve of the game though, the players - “There are no
players, only warriors” says one of the official posters - were almost
peripheral, with the home team practising at the B Ground next to the
National Cricket Academy.
—Agencies |