Friday, 6 February 2009

IPL Defines Credit Crunch


Two of England’s cricket stars became the most costly players in the Indian Premier League. Andrew Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen where bought for £1.1 million each at the auction in Goa.

Flintoff was bought buy Chennai whilst former England skipper Pietersen is going to be playing for Bangalore. The amounts will be paid to the players as salary, and will be based on the amount of games that they play.

Other England players to be bought in the auction include, Ravi Bopara to Kings XI Punjab for $450,000, Former England skipper Paul Collingwood for $275,000 while Owais Shah went for $375,000 both joined Delhi.

There were no bids for England’s other two players in contention at the auction, Sussex batsman Luke Wright and Nottinghamshire all-rounder Samit Patel.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni was the previous transfer record during the 2008 IPL auction, when Chennai bought the India captain for £1.04 m.

Last year the England players where not involved in the IPL auction due to international commitments and this year they will be restricted to half the tournament because of the home Test series against the West Indies in April and May. The 2009 IPL season will be held from 10 April to 29 May.

This is the second year of the Indian Premier League, which is a Twenty20 cricket competition that was set up by the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

There are eight franchises, not like clubs or county’s in England but more like the way sport is done in North America. The Eight Franchises in the IPL are,

Mumbai Indians

·      Royal Challengers Bangalore

·      Hyderabad Deccan Chargers

·      Chennai Super Kings

·      Delhi Daredevils

·      Kings XI Punjab

·      Kolkata Knight Riders

·      Rajasthan Royals

Last year the winners of the first IPL where the Rajasthan Royals who beat Flintoff’s new side Chennai Super Kings in the final.

The IPL is shown on Setanta, and this year English Cricket fans will be able to watch the tournament with a lot more interest than in the previous year, with the likes of Flintoff and Pietersen taking part.

Thursday, 5 February 2009

TV Mess Up


With the rights for the Premier league up for grabs yet again, and Sky successfully bidding, its left for everyone else to step up and bid, and the companies likely to get the rights are Setanta, or ESPN.

How bad will it be if ESPN, an American sports network owned by Disney got the rights to live Premier league games in this country.

I'm not saying ESPN are bad, because they are not far from it. I myself watch alot of American sport on TV on channel five, and ESPN show the Baseball (MLB), and American Football (NFL), but I feel that they should stick to covering their own sports and leave ours alone.

But with the gaffe ITV produced on Wednesday during the Mersyside Derby, ESPN will have a better chance than any of our terrestural Tv networks at showing live top flight football.

Setanta has done a good job, of the live premier league games they have been broadcasting, and in a short period of time are competing with Sky, and have taken FA Cup and England games away from Sky.

Going onto he rights for highlights the BBC has been successfull in that department, and thank god because Match Of The Day is alot better than the offering that ITV produced when they had the rights to Premier League highlights.

ITV has shown why once again they are a joke when it comes to football being broadcast, during the recent Everton v Liverpool FA Cup 4th round replay, fans indured 118 minutes of a dull match only for ITV to cut to and ad break with two minutes left of a game which looked like it was heading to penalties, only to come back and see Everton celebrating the winning goal.

ITV seems to let itself down when coming to football coverage, but why? They have really good Champions League coverage, and even their Uefa Cup coverage is good.

Sky leads the way in terms of football coverage, I don't have sky, but I go to the pb to watch games and their coverage is the best, and Setanta is also very good. When the BBC and ITV get a chance to prove themselves showing live football they seem to let not only themselves down but the viewers as well.