SLC keen to host IPL matches

Colombo, January 03: Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) has approached the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) about the possibility of hosting few of the fifth edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL) matches, the new SLC president, Upali Dharmadasa said. I feel it (a T20 league) is a needed thing. But I don t think it is the right time with India having the IPL. With most of our players going and playing there and the countries being so close, I would request the Indian board, and we have already started talking, why not play a couple of matches in Sri Lanka?, Dharmadasa was quoted as saying by cricinfo . Dharmadasa pointed out that the flight from Bangalore to Colombo was only an hour long and the flight from Mumbai was only slightly longer than a Mumbai to Chennai flight. Make it a venture. On the whole, they (the BCCI) will help Sri Lanka as a tourist attraction and see that Sri Lanka Cricket comes up, he said. India were supposed to play a full tour – three Tests, five ODIs and a Twenty20 game – in Sri Lanka but it was cut down to just three Tests in the new Futures Tour Programme. Dharmadasa then met with BCCI president N Srinivasan, after being appointed interim SLC president earlier this year, and convinced him that holding limited-overs games would be more beneficial financially to Sri Lanka. I am talking to the TV rights owners, Ten Sports. I am hopeful of raising almost US 12.5 million dollars, Dharmadasa said. He also said he was trying to arrange a fourth ODI as well. From a revenue point of view, I would love India to tour Sri Lanka three times a year. Unfortunately, it is not possible. But whenever possible (we would like them to tour), he added. The Sri Lanka Premier League (SLPL), in July 2011, had been postponed to August 2012, after facing a series of problems, including the unexpected withdrawal of Indian players from the tournament. The BCCI had withheld permission for its players to participate on the grounds that Somerset Entertainment Ventures, which owned the commercial rights, would be handling the contracts for international players and that could lead to complications should disputes arise over payments. There were also suggestions that former IPL chairman Lalit Modi had a hand in the event, but SLC and Somerset repeatedly denied those allegations.

—Agencies