India is playing host and its rockstars are holding the stage. Regardless of the home team winning the final or not on Sunday at Ahmedabad, expect the biggest stadium in cricket to be jam packed.
When the ICC reached out to media planners at the start of the tournament; the shifting narrative due to T20 explosion, the identity crisis facing ODI cricket, the non-inclusive (10 team) format were all outlined as challenges. Those fears have been allayed by record turnouts - both in stadia and on air.
But it would be short sighted to treat this World Cup as a referendum on ODI cricket. With the home team having a dream run, it did not matter if it was a T20 or an ODI World Cup, the crowds came flooding in. Not just for the home matches, a lot of the non-India matches were well attended too, taking the total spectator count past a million.
Looking at the upcoming cycle (2024-31), India despite being the game's commercial hub, can only host three white-ball events. Four of the eight world events will be of the 50 overs format; two of these will be played outside India.
The more pertinent question is what happens to ODI matches between the World Cups, as former South Africa captain and administrator Graeme Smith recently told HT. "The World Cups will always be huge. The question is how much ODI cricket is played in-between and how do you give context to each bilateral cricket series," he said.
Bu hikaye Hindustan Times dergisinin November 18, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Hindustan Times dergisinin November 18, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Palestinian PM Resigns Citing 'New Reality' Of War In Gaza
The United States and other powers have called for a reformed Palestinian Authority to take charge of all Palestinian territories after the end of war
Future Perfect: The Kids Are All Right
Gill and Jurel hold out promise by simplifying a challenging chase to help India seal series
Akshay feels 'blessed' to have worked with OG Ramayan cast
Director Akshay K Agarwal shot a music video, Humare Ram Aaye Hai, with the cast of the 1987 TV show, Ramayanactors Arun Govil, Dipika Chikhlia and Sunil Lahri - in Ayodhya recently.
Musk's firm gets nod for Sat Net; joins Jio, Bharti
Starlink, owned by billionaire Elon Musk, has been allowed to offer satellite broadband services in India, two officials aware of the development said.
A temple, 169 years in the making
Through decades of design and reworks, hurdles in engineering and construction, HT pieces together how the grandeur of the Ram Temple was reclaimed
'Political interference' forces Vihari to quit Andhra cricket
After Andhra bowed out of the Ranji Trophy at the quarter-final stage with a four-run defeat to Madhya Pradesh in Indore on Monday, senior batter Hanuma Vihari launched a scathing attack on the Andhra Cricket Association (ACA), saying he will never turn up for the state again.
Shafali, Kapp lead Capitals to a 9-wicket win over Warriorz
A blazing fifty by Shafali Verma (64₹, 43 balls) helped Delhi Capitals make a mockery of a target of 120 and open their account in the second edition of the Women's Premier League (WPL).
Making 'unbelievable things believable', the Ayhika way
The India No. 7 was an inspired pick for the world team event and she repaid the faith, beating the Chinese world No.1
'Connected TVs to reach 45 mn by 2024-end in India'
With improvement in broadband penetration, Indian households are increasingly opting for connected or addressable TVs.
India chip strategy makes progress as $21 billion in proposals received
The Indian government, after years of watching from the sidelines of the chips race, now has to evaluate $21 billion of semiconductor proposals and divvy up taxpayer support between foreign chipmakers, local champions or some combination of the two.