- IPL auction is the most compulsive reality television
- Astronomical bids for Kartik Sharma and other uncapped players no surprise
- IPL 2026: Ravi Bishnoi eyes learning from Ravindra Jadeja at Rajasthan Royals
- IPL 2026: “I would like to see him play the opening slot for KKR” – Kumble on Green’s role
- IPL 2026 mini-auction: Parth Jindal highlights growing importance of uncapped players
- IPL 2026 mini-auction: Akash Ambani Reveals Why MI Brought Back Quinton de Kock
- Manoj Badale breaks silence on RR’s big calls ahead of IPL 2026
- Prashant Veer, son of primary schoolteacher, hits Rs14 cr jackpot with CSK
Author: Ashok Namboodiri
PC- BCCI Mohinder Amarnath’s red handkerchief fluttering from his back pocket during the 1983 World Cup remains, for me, one of cricket’s most endearing sights – a mix of superstition, swagger, and pure individuality. Every time Jimmy adjusted that crimson talisman, it felt as though the hopes…
The Premier League’s 11th week offered a cocktail of dominance, drama, and defiance. While Manchester City sent out a thunderous reminder of their title credentials with a ruthless dismantling of Liverpool, Arsenal’s momentum took a brief stutter in Sunderland. Chelsea and Aston Villa continued to flex their attacking muscles, while Brentford delivered another giant-killing display. The week summed up why this season feels refreshingly open, with underdogs emboldened, giants vulnerable, and the tactical evolution of English football very much on display. A pulsating encounter in North London saw Tottenham and Manchester United trade punches till the end. United once again…
Ashok Namboodiri A brilliant sports producer is not just the person behind the console or the rundown – they are the conductor of emotion, the invisible storyteller turning competition into theatre. Every great broadcast, every goosebump moment – whether a clutch wicket, a last-minute goal, or a decisive raid – carries the imprint of a producer who knew exactly when to hold the frame, when to cut, and when to let silence roar. Sports, by its nature, is unpredictable. A producer’s job begins long before the toss or the whistle – scripting the unscriptable. They anticipate narratives, shape context, and…
Ashok Namboodiri Every time Indian cricket seems to have moved on from Prithvi Shaw, he finds a way to remind us that talent like his doesn’t disappear; it merely lies dormant, waiting for one audacious innings to announce its return. On his birthday today, it’s hard not to marvel at the sheer resilience of a cricketer who refuses to be forgotten. Shaw began the 2025 Ranji Trophy season with a whimper…a duck against Kerala. For most players, that would’ve been a shaky start. But Shaw being Shaw, the story changed within days. He followed the failure with a defiant…
There’s something deeply unsettling about a nation of 1.4 billion not finding a single bidder for its premier football league. It’s not just a commercial failure …it’s a reality check. Indian football, once poised to be the next big frontier after cricket, now stares at a future clouded by neglect, inconsistency, and a loss of confidence from both fans and financiers. Lets try and decode what has gone wrong. The agreement between AIFF and FSDL was set to expire in December, and the Supreme Court has ordered a pause until the AIFF constitution is sorted out. If you are a…
In the complex theatre of global cricket governance where influence is often inherited and continuity mistaken for progress, Jay Shah stands out as a reformer with intent. At just 35 he became the youngest ICC Chair in history, yet his career trajectory is built not on privilege but on a pattern of tangible achievements. His rise from the Gujarat Cricket Association to the BCCI, the Asian Cricket Council, and now the ICC represents a rare blend of operational acumen, strategic vision, and generational freshness. Under Shah’s stewardship, the Board of Control for Cricket in India redefined the economics of sport.…
When Rishabh Pant was named in India’s Test squad for the upcoming two-match series against South Africa, there was more to celebrate than just a selection. It marked the full-circle moment of one of the most stirring comeback stories in modern cricket – a reminder that life’s greatest innings often begin after its hardest knocks. Pant’s return isn’t just a sporting milestone; it’s a parable in courage, perseverance, and authenticity. From the moment Pant burst onto the scene, he was touted as India’s next great entertainer – a mix of Virender Sehwag’s fearlessness and Adam Gilchrist’s aggression. But behind the…
When India’s women lifted the ICC Women’s ODI World Cup at the DY Patil Stadium, it felt like the 1983 moment all over again. Suddenly, women’s cricket wasn’t niche; it was prime time. Sponsors were calling, brands were realigning campaigns, and broadcasters reported record TRPs for a women’s event. The natural next question and one that’s dividing opinion in cricket boardrooms is this: should the Women’s Premier League (WPL) expand now and adopt a full home-and-away format, or pause and consolidate? Momentum is a rare ally in sport. The Indian team’s triumph has created a surge of national pride and…
Ashok Namboodiri When India Women lifted the ICC World Cup at DY Patil Stadium, it wasn’t just a sporting milestone, it was a brand moment. The kind of inflection point that marketers, broadcasters, and investors wait decades for. For years, women’s cricket in India was a promise waiting for a platform. Now it has a product, a proposition, and most importantly, a reason to believe. This victory turns women’s cricket from a sub-brand to a standalone franchise. In 1983, India discovered the power of cricket as a cultural asset. In 2025, India has discovered it as a diversified business…
In The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams imagined a supercomputer named Deep Thought that spent 7.5 million years pondering the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything. When the answer finally arrived, it was stunningly simple: 42. For decades, people tried decoding that number. Mathematicians saw symmetry, philosophers saw satire, programmers saw binary poetry (42 in ASCII translates to the asterisk, the symbol for “anything”). And tonight, in Navi Mumbai, the universe finally gave its own interpretation – 42 years after 1983, India’s women lifted their first ODI World Cup. If Deep Thought was…
