NEW DELHI: As the Indian cricket board (BCCI) gets aggressive with the implementation of its anti-corruption guidelines in the IPL, it has started to come down heavily on players, officials, family of ...
The Board's Anti-Corruption Unit flagged unauthorised guests in the hotel rooms of players, support staff and team officials and also warned of potential honey traps ...
The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is not looking to eliminate social media engagement within the Indian ...
BCCI secretary Devajit Saikia is not against IPL's reel culture but wants restricted access of unathorised personnel in ...
New mandates include strict limits on hotel guests, a 10 p.m. visitor cutoff, and mandatory reporting of player movements.
RR captain Riyan Parag was allegedly spotted vaping in the dressing room during the IPL 2026 clash against Punjab Kings in Mullanpur. (Photo: Screengrab) From Riyan Parag’s viral vape to legal notices ...
The backlash began after a light-hearted reel Shresta Iyer made with the Punjab Kings social media team following PBKS’ ...
The latest trend on social media features AI-generated videos that emulate the excitement of live cricket matches, particularly the IPL. Users are creating realistic clips that showcase them enjoying ...
For years, IPL advertising was simple: buy a spot, go big, and hope eyeballs translated to buzz. The glitz of stadium branding and the dopamine hit of a primetime TVC during a key over were considered ...
In a post on her Instagram account MadhuPriya, she shared a video of the incident that occurred after the match between Sunrisers Hyderabad and Punjab Kings on April 11.
The ‘honey traps’ the BCCI is concerned about also stems from the players’ growing proximity with influencers and vloggers. The ACU has flagged the issue of senior international players alowing their ...