Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) may be keen to host the currently-suspended Indian Premier League (IPL) cricket tournament. But influential voices within the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) feel that there is no point in discussing such a proposal in a “closed world” battling the COVID-19 pandemic right now.
SLC proposes Sri Lanka as host for IPL
The IPL, scheduled from March 29-May 24, has been postponed indefinitely by the BCCI in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Board will only conduct the tournament when normalcy returns.
SLC President Shammi Silva on Thursday said that Sri Lanka is ready to host the mega event as the country, which has fewer positive cases, is expected to return to normalcy earlier compared to India.
“The BCCI will not be in a position to say anything when the world is closed,” a senior Board official told PTI on conditions of anonymity.
Indian Premier League – Is it really glamorous?
The official confirmed that currently, there is no proposal from the SLC and there is no guarantee when a meaningful discussion can take place on the subject even if it comes along.
Currently, international flights have been mostly suspended after several countries imposed lockdowns to contain the deadly virus.
“There is no proposal from SLC yet and obviously no discussion,” the official said when asked what will be the BCCI’s stand when the offer is on table.
How life has changed due to COVID-19 – a letter from a first-class cricketer
With logistics reduced to less than half as there are no inland flights, the SLC can have the matches on three grounds, namely: Galle, Kandy and Premadasa Stadium in Colombo.
Having an IPL could help the SLC gain significant financial stability, more than what a short white-ball series against India (three T20Is and three ODIs) can guarantee in July.
As of now, the BCCI will be more keen on having it in India in either of the two slots between September-October and October-November.
Royal Challengers Bangalore buy Isuru Udana
A BCCI veteran, who was a part of the teams when IPL was shifted to South Africa in 2009 and partially to the UAE (2014) due to Indian parliamentary elections, feels that the scenario in the International Cricket Council (ICC) will change once Shashank Manohar demits office as Chairman at the end of May.
“Sri Lanka has been BCCI’s ally at the ICC and their proposal is understandable. But what about once he (Manohar) steps down next month,” he said.
“You could see new equations forming and there could be multiple options on table, not just Sri Lanka,” the board veteran added.