The upGrad founder and sports investor on how the domestic sports ecosystem has shaped up since his first investment, in the Pro Kabaddi league in 2014
Q. Almost 10 years as a sports entrepreneur, what are your key observations about India’s sports leagues landscape?
India doesn't need to be a sport-loving country as much as it needs to be a sport-participating country, because only if you play it do you start loving the sport. The reason why football is popular in Europe and the UK is because you always see a parent dropping their kids to football practice on Saturdays and Sundays. Not in India. We are not a sport-playing country, nor do we think it’s aspirational to have a career in sports. Now we are celebrating many of our sports people because they're going out and doing that, but we don’t invest time and effort into it. That’s what the leagues do, they help make a career in sport by bringing attention to the sport.
Unfortunately, it also brings a sense of herd mentality, because if two leagues do well, several others come up. I love panja, but I’m not quite sure how that sport can become a league. But having said that, these akhadas have a massive following—thousands of people come to watch a match from a long way off. There is huge passion for that, and a league helps platform that passion. So, a league, essentially, gives platform to a sport.
Q. When you first invested in sports, in a kabaddi franchise back in 2014, it wasn’t a top-of-the-mind sport. What convinced you to put your money?
For me, kabaddi was a disruptive idea because it was an underdog sport. It’s always challenging to back an underdog sport, and that’s the interesting part. When I understood the tweaks that were being made to these kabaddi games, it was fun for me to go out there and say let’s push it. In the IPL, the exhilaration comes from the fact that you are always down to the last over—most matches go down to the wire. Same with Pro Kabaddi. If we had done what happens to the sport at the Asian level, it would be very boring, and it wouldn’t work. We put kabaddi on the mat, we did a do-or-die round, which means after every two rounds you have to score. These changes glamourised kabaddi and made it a thrilling sport to watch. Of course, in those early years, it was a risk, but so was the IPL, where the franchises started making good money only after the first 10 years or so.