The
BCCI,
which
has
been
criticised
in
the
earlier
for
not
setting up
the
Women’s
IPL,
will
need
AGM’s
approval
to
kickstart
the
league
up coming
year.
The
Board
is
organizing
to
have
five
or
six
teams
in
the
inaugural
edition.
All
the
current
10
men’s
IPL
franchises
will
be
given
the
initially
appropriate
of
refusal
to
invest in
the
Women’s
IPL
groups.
It
is
learnt
that
at
least
4
men’s
IPL
franchises
are
interested
in
understanding
from
the
BCCI
what
is
on
the
table
in
circumstance
they
want
to
commit
in
WIPL.
“It
(the
entire-fledged
women’s
IPL)
has
to
be
authorized
by
the
AGM.
We
approach
to
start out
it
by
following
year
hopefully,”
BCCI
president
Sourav
Ganguly
advised
reporters
following
the
IPL
Governing
Council
meeting
here
on
Friday.
In
an
job interview
with
PTI
past
thirty day period,
Ganguly
experienced
stated
that
Women’s
IPL
will
be
introduced
in
2023.
IPL
chairman
Brijesh
Patel
also
built
it
crystal clear
that
this
time
there
will
be
4
matches
for
the
3
women of all ages
groups
all-around
men’s
IPL
enjoy-offs.
“There
will
be
four
matches
involving
3
groups
all-around
the
time
of
the
playoffs,”
Patel
reported
after
the
assembly.
With
the
2nd
half
of
the
IPL
staying
shifted
to
the
UAE
owing
to
the
pandemic,
the
exhibitions
online games
have been
not
held
very last
calendar year.
Even so,
they
were being
staged
in
the
UAE
in
2020
when
IPL
Trailblazers
won
the
title.
In accordance
to
Patel,
there
would
be
5
or
6
teams
in
the
Women’s
IPL
but
all over again
that
would
need to have
the
approval
of
the
Common
System.
The
most
most likely
location
for
the
women’s
exhibitions
game titles
is
Pune.
The
IPL
begins
on
Saturday
(March
26)
with
defending
champions
Chennai
Super
Kings
locking
horns
with
Kolkata
Knight
Riders
at
the
legendary
Wankhede
stadium.
IPL
media
legal rights
tender
to
be
out
shortly
The
concern
of
IPL
media
rights
for
the
2023-2027
cycle
was
also
reviewed
by
the
Governing
Council.
“The
tender
will
be
out
before long,”
stated
a
Governing
Council
member.
Star
India
had
paid out
a
whopping
Rs
16,347.5
crore
for
the
2018-2022
cycle.
With
the
league’s
attractiveness
soaring
and
the
addition
of
two
new
groups,
that
number
could
touch
a
staggering
Rs
40,000
crore
for
the
impending
five-yr
cycle.
Companies
intrigued
in
securing
the
legal rights
to
India
cricket’s
hottest
residence
include
Reliance
backed
Viacom
18,
recent
proper
holders
Disney
Star,
Sony
(which
had
paid
Rs
8200
for
nine
yrs,
back again
in
2009)
and
streaming
big
Amazon
which
could
bid
for
the
digital
rights.
(With
PTI
inputs)