HomeNewsCricketThe 1990s television revolution of Indian cricket and BCCI’s rise to riches

The 1990s television revolution of Indian cricket and BCCI’s rise to riches

The 1990s saw live cricket replace soaps across the nation of Doordarshan-watching one-TV-set households. If the 1996 World Cup was a watershed moment for the BCCI to understood the volume of Indian TV audience, the IPL was its jackpot.

June 25, 2023 / 12:40 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
In a shocker to Doordarshan, the BCCI sold the rights of India’s home series against England in early 1993 to Trans World International for $600,000, Doordarshan had to pay TWI $1 million to telecast the matches in India.
In a shocker to Doordarshan, the BCCI sold the rights of India’s home series against England in early 1993 to Trans World International for $600,000, Doordarshan had to pay TWI $1 million to telecast the matches in India.

We have discussed the rise of Indian cricket coverage, first on radio, then on television on these pages. Yet, for years, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) did not make any money from the cricket played in India. The idea had not even occurred to them.

The BCCI’s revenue from these matches came from on-field advertisements and ticket sales. Doordarshan had exclusive rights to these, and yet, they did not pay the BCCI anything. If anything, the BCCI sometimes paid Doordarshan for coverage.

Story continues below Advertisement

Then, in late 1991, something significant happened: South Africa returned from a two-decade exile to international cricket. Throughout the 1980s, South Africa had lured several teams to play ‘Rebel’ tours. These touring cricketers were paid with amounts so exorbitant that they were willing to risk life bans by their boards.

The driving force behind these tours was Dr Ali Bacher, South Africa’s last male Test captain before they had been ostracised. Back in the capacity of manager for the 1991-92 tour of India, Bacher was keen for live telecast of the three historical ODIs back home.