Traditionally, innovation is seen as capacity for something new or different
introduced, but in the world of sport, especially in the context of
IPL, the term innovation has to be rather more liberal, accepting in its
sheathe more than just the new or original thought. In other words,
recent innovations in T20 cricket vis-a-vis IPL borrowing and adopting
ideas from other popular sporting leagues like National Basketball
Association (NBA) and National Football League (NFL) tend to lean on
imitation, yet irrelevant of its broad acceptance; imitation can never
be equated to innovation. From terms like private franchises, player
auctions and cheerleaders to buzzwords like strategic timeouts &
dug-out that are conventional to a NBA or a NFL follower are now
familiar with cricket followers courtesy IPL. Watts Humphrey rightly
said “Innovation is the process of turning ideas into manufacturable and
marketable form”, with its tremendous success, IPL serves as a standing
testimony to his words, boasting a billion dollar revenue generating
business that is largely targeted to benefit the investors/franchise
owners and partly the players.
Personally,
the bottom line in writing this has nothing to do with IPL’s great
capacity to spring surprises, nothing to do with its much talked about
glorious future. On the other hand, it has to do with what have taken on
the nightmarish dimensions of a dark reality – Cricket will never be
the same. But this is a harsh reality that is not easy to deal with for
the great sport’s many puritans, who often love the game more for
quality than for cheap entertainment. What started out innocuously as a
profitable vision has gained sizable force and substantial magnitude
needed to hold for large-scale and long term expansion. Truly, IPL has
invaded and deeply penetrated in all walks of T20 cricket and you just
have to scratch the surface to see it.