Gayle, Ryder, Other Former Stars Stranded In Srinagar Hotel After IHPL Scam
Gayle, Ryder, Other Former Stars Stranded in Srinagar Hotel After IHPL Scam
Srinagar- Billed as a major event to unearth new cricket talent from Kashmir, the Indian Heaven Premier League (IHPL) has turned out to be a scam as the organisers have fled, leaving several former international stars like Chris Gayle stranded in a hotel here due to non-payment of bills.
The IHPL, which began here amid huge fanfare in the last week of October, was organised by the Mohali-based Yuva Society.
Huge billboards featuring former cricketers like Gayle, Devon Smith, Jesse Ryder and Shakib-al-Hassan came up at several places across the city, announcing that these megastars will play alongside the local players in the league which was scheduled to end on November 8.
ADVERTISEMENTMost of the matches were played at Bakshi Stadium with music blaring from loudspeakers during the intervals.
However, the league ended abruptly on Saturday as the players refused to turn up for matches due to unpaid dues. The organisers did a vanishing act, forcing the hotel where the players were staying, to stop them from leaving till their dues were cleared.
The story came to the fore when Mellisa Juniper, an Englishwoman who was an umpire at the event, said they had not been paid.
“We have not received any payment,” Juniper said, adding she was informed by the hotel staff about the“missing organisers”. While police did visit the hotel, there was no official word whether any action has been initiated by the cops.
Gayle was among several players who had played in the Legends' League cricket tournament last year in Kashmir. The event, which was a private one just like the IHPL this year, had drawn huge crowds to the stadiums as locals got to see international players in action for the first time in nearly 40 years.
Parminder Singh, who is listed as chairman of the Yuva Society, might have been swayed by the success of the Legends' League to organise the IHPL in Kashmir.
They booked the Bakshi Stadium, owned by the Jammu and Kashmir Sports Council, and paid the rent up front for hosting the matches.
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