For the third year in a row, the IPL had a different champion • Indian Premier League
"I've played this game for 20-odd years. I've seen Sachin Tendulkar smash
bowlers all around the park plenty of times, and I've seen some wonderful
players, but this is probably the best innings I've ever seen." So said Shane
Warne, the Rajasthan Royals captain, about Yusuf Pathan's 37-ball century
against Mumbai Indians on the second day of the third IPL. He couldn't stop
gushing, even though his side had lost by four runs.
It was a ridiculous statement; even Warne, the agent provocateur nonpareil,
should have known he was not giving a pep talk in the dugout but making a
declaration to the world. But hyperbole was one of the strongest bricks that the
IPL's architect, Lalit Modi, used while constructing the league. Since day one,
the likes of Warne have been strengthening that foundation.
Modi made it clear nothing would stop him turning the IPL into the first
global Asian sporting brand. In the weeks before the third tournament, he
stressed that his only goal was "reach, reach, reach". So he signed a one-year
deal with ITV, which itself was returning to high-profile cricket broadcasting
in the UK after a generation. Even considering the matches were shown on
ITV4, a free-to-air channel, the broadcasts proved a raging success - a daily
average of 400,000 viewers was ten times the figure achieved by Setanta, the
pay-TV network which had bagged the original rights in 2008 but collapsed in
2009, leaving the IPL without a UK broadcaster for its second season.
Modi could only smile back at the enraged cricket purists in England. No
matter what the die-hard fanatics thought about the quality, the numbers
revealed that a lot more people were interested in watching the bling of the
IPL compared to the staid cricket being played by England in Bangladesh
(their tour overlapped with the first part of IPL3).
There was a further boost when Modi signed a two-year deal to stream the
matches 15 minutes after they finished. They were screened on the Googleowned
YouTube in all countries bar the United States. According to the New
York Times, "about 50 million viewers tuned in to YouTube's IPL channel,
25% more than Google executives said they expected when they signed the
deal in January. Approximately 40% of those viewers were outside India."
Several new sponsors were added, including one for the controversial afterhours
party: here players would mingle with a select group of fans, who had to
buy the invitations at premium prices - but Modi knew the idol-worshipping
Indian fan would stop at nothing. More money was brought to the table when
Modi found another 150 seconds of commercial space by throwing ads between
deliveries mid-over. For the purist this was the final slap; already the screen
space was partially obscured by vertical ads that cut the size of the live picture.
Still, nothing could deter the crowds thronging to the 12 venues. It was clear
that Indian fans had dearly missed the IPL the previous year when it was
displaced to South Africa. Now the show was back in town, they were willing
to brave the heat, the moths, and even - in Bangalore towards the end of the tournament - a bomb scare. Two of what the police called "low-intensity"
devices exploded around the Chinnaswamy Stadium - one at an entrance and
another a few hundreds yards away - and the match between Royal Challengers
Bangalore and Mumbai Indians was delayed. But the teams remained mostly
unaffected, as their bosses personally assured the players, especially the
overseas contingent, that it was safe to stay and play.
On the field, Sachin Tendulkar was the star. He had opted out of India's
national 20-over side three years previously, saying Twenty20 was a format
more appropriate for youngsters, but now he added another chapter to his everevolving
career by playing some traditional cricket with a calm pulse to set up
most of Mumbai Indians' 11 victories. Tendulkar finished as the tournament's
highest run-getter with 618 at 48, including five half-centuries, and four match
awards, not to forget the Man of the Series gong. His success and tactical nous
drove his Mumbai team-mate Harbhajan Singh to suggest that his captain
should reconsider his decision not to play Twenty20 for his country.
Tendulkar was touched by Harbhajan's sentiment, but remained happy to
allow Mahendra Singh Dhoni to safeguard India's fortunes. Dhoni, captaining
Chennai Super Kings, again proved a smart strategist, fielding three spinners
in the crucial semi-final, and before that throwing the
new ball to off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, whose
alliance with the left-arm pace of Doug Bollinger put
Chennai back on the tracks after a terrible start. Before
Bollinger arrived in India to make his IPL debut,
Chennai had lost five of their first eight matches, but
once he was paired up with Ashwin - the most
economical regular bowler in the tournament - they choked the flow of runs in
the crucial powerplay overs, shifting the momentum towards Chennai, who
finished with six wins in their final eight games.
But Chennai's, and the IPL's, most stunning picture materialised in
Dharmasala, where Dhoni cracked a swashbuckling half-century, including 30
off the final two overs, to help his side become the only team to make the semifinals
in each of the IPL's three seasons. It was a must-win game, so, after
Dhoni hit the winning back-to-back sixes off Irfan Pathan, he screamed in
ecstasy to release all his pent-up energy while he punched manically at his jaw.
A week later he brought his slow bowlers on early again to stifle Mumbai's
batsmen in the final, helping Chennai lift the IPL crown for the first time.
Although the standard of the fielding - and perhaps overall - was lower than
in the first two IPLs, there were more hold-your-breath moments for the photo
album. Justin Kemp's backward-running, twisting, one-handed clincher on the
ropes to dismiss Virender Sehwag in Chennai's match against Delhi Daredevils
was one of the best catches; in the same game Matthew Hayden walked out
with the long-handled, short-bodied Mongoose bat and thrashed Delhi into
submission, thereby giving the bat-maker priceless exposure. For Bangalore,
Robin Uthappa's muscularity oozed through powerful hits over the shortened
boundaries, but it was his switch-hits that lingered more in the memory,
because of their effortlessness. Competing with Kemp for best catch of the
tournament was David Hussey of Kolkata; it also came against Delhi. Paul Collingwood hit a flat-batted stroke which seemed to be sailing over long-on;
Hussey took a couple of steps backwards, jumped up, was on the other side of
the rope as he parried the ball back while still airborne, then sprang back on to
the field to complete a stupendous effort.
Of the other teams, the most disappointing were Delhi Daredevils, who on
paper boasted one of the most fearsome batting line-ups. They started well, but
subsequently looked out of sorts, and fragmented. Royal Challengers
Bangalore, runners-up in IPL2, stayed in contention till the semis but, once
Jacques Kallis grew tired after a long summer and failed to provide an opening
burst, their middle order struggled.
The Deccan Chargers captain Adam Gilchrist fell away with the bat. After
making 149 runs in his first four innings, his remaining 12 knocks produced
only 140, with seven single-figure scores. The defending champions did still
reach the last four - they had to win their last five league games to do it - with
much credit going to Andrew Symonds and Rohit Sharma for their sensible
batting. Rajasthan Royals, who lost match-winners such as Graeme Smith
and Dimitri Mascarenhas to injury early on, again relied heavily on Warne, but
at 40 even he couldn't overcome the inaugural champions' misfortunes on his
own. He finished with 11 wickets at 27, and an economy-rate of 7.62. The
New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond was bagged by Kolkata Knight Riders
for the princely sum of $750,000, but didn't do much (nine wickets in eight
games) for the IPL's most popular team, owned by Bollywood heart-throb
Shah Rukh Khan and led by Bengal's favourite son, Sourav Ganguly.
But it was Kings XI Punjab, one of the more successful teams of the
league's first two seasons, who plummeted to the bottom, mainly because of
the failure of Yuvraj Singh (255 runs in 14 games with a highest score of 43),
while Kumar Sangakkara, who replaced him as captain, had a subdued time
too. Tom Moody, one of the best coaches around, said Yuvraj's slump was
down to a wrist injury, but he knew his star player was below par in fitness,
batting, fielding and even attitude. Yuvraj maintained a relaxed attitude off the
pitch as well: at a meeting with the Dalai Lama in Dharmasala he asked him
what his favourite sport was (table tennis).
Among those seeking the meaning of life beyond cricket in the Tibetan head
monk's summer palace was Modi himself. The couple of hundred fans who
lined the steep and narrow path leading to it instantly recognised Modi, on the
verge of a descent into turbulent times. India's tax authorities had found
irregularities in the ownership structure of the Kochi franchise (one of two
new entrants for IPL4, the second being a Pune side fronted by the Sahara
Group, India's team sponsors) after Modi himself, in a reckless moment that
ultimately proved his downfall, had posted the individual stakes of Kochi's
various owners on Twitter. That exposed the involvement of Shashi Tharoor,
a minister in India's federal government, who had to resign within days.
Modi himself soon hit rock bottom as the government revealed that "all
aspects of the IPL" were under investigation. None of the BCCI's functionaries
attended the final, not even the secretary, N. Srinivasan, owner of the victorious
Chennai team. After the presentations Modi was handed a letter of suspension
from the board, and an inquiry began into the many allegations.