Sign In
New User? Register
bluebillionrises · For the True Indian Cricket Fan!
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
You can set the sort order of messages? Just click on the link in the date column. Your preferences will be remembered, so you don't have to do it again when you return.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Indian Premier League News & Videos   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #327 of 335 |
The Board of Control for Cricket in India has announced its
much-awaited Indian Premier League (IPL) bid winners for the
respective teams. GMR group has won the bid for Delhi team whereas UB
group's Vijay Mallya bagged the contract for Bangalore team. Ness
Wadia takes control of Chandigarh team and Mukesh Ambani has been
declared the bid winner for Mumbai team. Bollywood king, Shah Rukh
Khan has been given charge for Kolkata team.

India cements hold the rights for Chennai team and Deccan Chronicle
has Hyderabad. `Investors' in cricket have been given rights for
Jaipur team.

The following are the bid amounts and winners for various teams in the
Indian Premier League:

Vijay Mallya won the bid for the Bangalore team for $111.6 million.

Shah Rukh Khan won the bid for the Kolkata team for $75.09 million.

GMR Holdings won the bid for the Delhi team for $84 million.

Mukesh Ambani won the bid for the Mumbai team for $111.9 million.

India Cements won the bid for the Chennai team for $91 million.

Deccan Chronicle won the bid for the Hyderabad team for $107.01 million.

Emerging Media won the bid for the Jaipur team for $67 million.

Ness Wadia won the bid for the Mohali team for $76 million, reportedly.

The auction includes players' contracts and team franchisee.

According to the IPL tender document, the franchisee revenue is
divided into two sections. The first is centralised revenue under
which falls the title sponsorship, media right and official umpires'
sponsorships.

The second is franchisee revenue which primarily deals with team
naming rights, team shirt sponsorship and ticketing revenues. Based on
the calculations of the media rights, some of the bidders have reached
the conclusion on Wednesday evening that earnings from the sale of
different rights are not going to exceed more than $8 million (Rs 320
crore).

"It is natural for any business to break even in a couple of years.
IPL is a big venture and it's certainly going to do wonder to the
world of cricket," a top IPL official told TOI on Wednesday. If that
happens, Indian cricket will surely benefit from the 10-year event on
and off the field.

In the inaugural Indian Premier League (IPL) which starts from April
18, BCCI has decided to pay them and some other senior cricketers
10-15% more money than the highest auctioned player of the Twenty20 event.

Sources said BCCI has shortlisted five cricketers - Sachin Tendulkar,
Sourav Ganguly, Rahul Dravid, MS Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh - who will be
called "icon players" and will be the highest paid players in the
league. They will not be auctioned if they have a city team.

IPL chairman Lalit Modi confirmed, "This is one of the BCCI
suggestions and it awaits the nod of the IPL board. The player bids
will take place next month."

A top BCCI official added that regular members of the Indian team will
probably make Rs 1.2 crore to Rs 2 crore from the 44-day event, with
the icon players getting the highest amount.

The Future Group too made a late entry. And other bidders included
DLF, Private Equity Fund and Videocon.

For Cricket Videos :
http://www.crix.in/searchVideo.html?search=IPL

For Indian Cricket League : http://www.crix.in/searchVideo.html?search=ICL




Sun Jan 27, 2008 8:05 am

kannan_prem
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #327 of 335 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

The Board of Control for Cricket in India has announced its much-awaited Indian Premier League (IPL) bid winners for the respective teams. GMR group has won...
Prem Kumar
kannan_prem
Offline Send Email
Jan 28, 2008
7:35 am
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help