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Cricket and COVID-19 | Suspending IPL is a hare-brained idea

Calculated risks need to be taken to further open the economy. The Indian Premier League, in that sense, is an example of how big ticket sporting events can be held in the ‘new normal’, for the foreseeable future 

June 02, 2021 / 18:03 IST
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Chennai Super Kings (Image: IPL, BCCI)

There’s a growing chorus for boycotting the Indian Premier League (IPL). The reasons for such calls are hazy at best.

Through his tweet former Australian cricketer Adam Gilchrist asked if it was appropriate for IPL to continue and if it served as an important distraction. A media house found it ‘incongruous that the festival of cricket is on in India’ (whatever that means), and decided to suspend its IPL coverage. Also, social media users called out celebrities (cricketers included) for not voicing their views on the COVID-19 health emergency India is currently facing. Many of them who have been vocal in the past, especially about India’s farm laws, are now conspicuous in their silence.

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Thankfully, the argument here is not about the quality of cricket played in the IPL — that’s a ship that sailed about 13 years ago.

Is there a moral argument against holding the IPL at a time when COVID-19 cases are spiking? Is it ethically right to have sports when large parts of the nation are facing a health nightmare? Maybe. It is, however, a tenuous one. Logic would suggest that the show must go on — provided it remains within a bio-bubble, and is not an impediment to efforts to fight the pandemic.