HomeNewsOpinionT20 World Cup 2024: American cricket has a bonanza coming

T20 World Cup 2024: American cricket has a bonanza coming

Afghanistan's remarkable performances in the just concluded ODI World Cup came with none of the advantages now accruing to American cricket. Given that Afghanistan broke into cricket’s top tier less than a decade ago, there’s no reason the US team can’t improve from its current world ranking of 2022, with much better funding, infrastructure and playing opportunities

November 22, 2023 / 14:07 IST
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The US will have much more skin in the game next summer, when it co-hosts the next World Cup, along with seven Caribbean islands.

One of the planet’s biggest sporting events came to a climactic conclusion last Sunday, with Australia upsetting the odds to beat hosts India in the final of the ICC Cricket World Cup. The US was not among the 10 teams that qualified for the tournament, but there was, for the first time ever, an American interest in the sport’s international competition.

That’s thanks to this summer’s inaugural season of Major League Cricket. Fourteen of the 51 overseas players who were spread across the MLC’s six teams featured at the World Cup, with the South African pair of Quinton De Kock (Seattle Orcas) and David Miller (Texas Super Kings) catching the eye with big performances.

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But, to gratuitously mix sporting metaphors, the US will have much more skin in the game next summer, when it co-hosts the next World Cup, along with seven Caribbean islands. Around a third of the 55 games will be played in three American venues — one each in New York’s Nassau County, Florida’s Broward County and Dallas, Texas — and the US national team will get automatic qualification.

There will be an economic dividend, too. Cricket is the world’s second-most popular sport after soccer, which makes it highly attractive for international brands. Advertising around World Cups is an especially effective way for companies to connect with the vast Indian market: The nation of 1.4 billion people is famously cricket-mad. Each of the three American venues can also expect a boost in tourism, as fans follow their teams.