MUMBAI: Canada could very have its own version of a T20 cricket league on the lines of the successful Indian Premier League (IPL).
Indian-origin Toronto businessman Roy Singh, who has interests in gold exploration in Guyana, says his mission is to launch the Canadian Premier League.
“I have watched the huge success of the Indian Premier League and we can do the same in Canada and the US,” Roy Singh, who has already set up the Canadian Premier League T20 to set the ball rolling for T20 cricket in this country, told newswire IANS.
The only thing coming in the way is the lack of infrastructure for cricket, he said. To address this problem, Singh has undertaken to build an indoor stadium near Niagara Falls.
“We are buying 153 acres of land for building the indoor stadium. It is just eight minutes from Niagara Falls. It is a big-budget venue,” he said. The fully operational Canadian Premier League will have 27 matches every season. “We will have 10 teams in two divisions.”
Singh said: “As a cricket-loving businessman, I see a big business opportunity in T20 cricket. But a lot of costs are involved… you need a stadium to bring fans and start broadcasting.”
Like the IPL, the Canadian Premier League will bank on sponsorships, merchandising, gate collections and broadcasting rights to become profitable, he added.
“Broadcasters can get an estimated 27 million viewers in North America alone. We will also sell broadcasting rights in India, the Caribbean and elsewhere,” Singh said.
Cricket was Canada’s official sport more than 150 years ago before it was dethroned by NHL. And the sport’s governing body — the Canadian Cricket Association — was set up in 1892. But cricket has staged a major comeback in the country as many first-class players from India,
Pakistan, Sri Lanka and the Caribbean have moved to this country. In 2008, the Canadian government also recognised cricket as a national sport with promises of federal funding.