Chess or IPL, here’s the ideal way to price tickets

Chess or IPL, here’s the ideal way to price tickets

If you have nowhere in particular to go and are in a hurry to reach there—so went the tagline of a sporty line of Mercedes Benz cars. Some kinds of fun can be expensive. Even second-hand ones, in which you are an observer and thus a vicarious, rather than a direct, participant, such as when you watch a game. Right now, chess lovers in Chennai are chafing at the price of a ticket to watch the 44th Chess Olympiad, which India got the chance to host, thanks to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, stripping Russia of its chance to host the event. Daily tickets are going for 2,000 to 3,000 for the average Muthuvel—if you are a civil servant, a young chess enthusiast or a woman, you get to knock one zero out of that figure. Tickets to the Indian Premier League, (of cricket, of course), are way more expensive, even if the capacity of stadia that host them are 40-50 times as large as chess venues. But all these pale in comparison to the cost of a ticket to the Centre Court or Court Number One at Wimbledon. Regular tickets are allocated by lottery, or rather the right to buy a regular ticket is allocated by lottery. Then, there is the option of queuing up for three days—with an umbrella, sporting cheer and a stiff upper lip ready at hand, in which case, you can buy a limited number of regular tickets for as little as £27. If you love tennis and being seen at the Mecca of tennis, but balk at roughing it out for hours on end in queue, you have the option of buying debenture tickets. These are five-year qualified corporate bonds issued by the All England Lawn Tennis Ground Plc that offer guaranteed tickets to matches on Centre Court and Court Number One at Wimbledon. The 2021-25 series sold for an initial price of £80,000 in 2019, to be paid in three instalments, and these sold for as much as £120,000 in May 2021. The debenture buyer lends money to the issuer and is entitled to repayment. Only a pittance of the price of the debenture is repaid, the rest is a premium you pay for the privilege of buying the debenture and the assured tickets that come with them for each of the five years comprising the tenure of the bond. One of the sweet features of the Wimbledon ticket debenture is that it is exempt from capital gains tax—qualified corporate bonds have that privilege in British tax law, for reasons too arcane for mere mortals to venture to understand. The British Isles, let’s remember, also include tax havens such as Jersey and the Isle of Man, and London is also called Londongrad because of the city’s population density of Russian oligarchs squirrelling their wealth away outside the reach of Russia and President Vladimir Putin. In the case of the tickets you buy after winning a lottery, people have found such tickets get cancelled because they used the same credit card to buy more than one ticket. Such restrictions do not apply to the debenture tickets. So, if you want assured tickets that seat you side by side at a Wimbledon match, you need to be a Tennis great, a member of the British royalty, one of the 500 members of the All England Lawn Tennis Club or shell out to buy a debenture that gets you assured tickets—for a steep price. The Wimbledon ticket thus gets elevated to one of the many discreet charms of the bourgeoisie.
That risk is inherent in any mechanism that uses price to allocate a scarce resource. Such allocation with integrity is vital—viz the stampede and riot police action at the Stad de France UEFA championship final in May this year, in which not just inept crowd control but also a large number of fake tickets played a role. Is there some other way to distribute tickets that would not be considered arbitrary? An auction is the best way to allocate scarce resources. A Dutch auction, in which the seller starts with a high price and keeps lowering the price till all the goods on offer find buyers would probably be the most efficient. But that has one disadvantage: in the case of chess, grand master and five times world champion Viswanathan Anand might find himself priced out of a ticket to the chess tournament, even as a local builder walks in, struggling to find the flavour of caramelised popcorn past the taste of paan that had filled his mouth minutes before. A workable solution might be to allot a certain proportion of tickets to be allocated on the basis of willingness to pay, another lot, on the basis of demonstrated fondness for the game (score of the would-be ticket-buyer in a quiz on the game serving as a proxy, for example), proven expertise in the game (membership of chess associations, if not recognized professional ranking), and quotas for young enthusiasts and so on. An overarching solution is online streaming of the game, for access that is free, subsidized by advertising or at a very low cost. As more and more of India’s teeming millions rise above the tedium of subsistence and seek active or vicarious participation in assorted sports and games, how to manage that process fairly would be a challenge that would need to be addressed.

Catch all the Business News, Market News, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint.
Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates.

More
Less

Subscribe to Mint Newsletters * Enter a valid email * Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.
Topics


.

IPL 2022: Rohit Sharma’s forgettable season could be a cause for concern ahead of major assignments

IPL 2022: Rohit Sharma’s forgettable season could be a cause for concern ahead of major assignments

While the spotlight was almost exclusively trained on Virat Kohli’s triple golden-duck Indian Premier League season, the man who replaced him as India captain wasn’t having the best time out in the middle either. In fact, Rohit Sharma had an arguably worse IPL 2022 than even the torrid tournament that Kohli endured.
While Kohli averaged 22.73 and struck at 115.98 in 16 matches, Rohit tallied 19.14 and 120.17 from 14 without scoring a single half-century. It was his lowest average in 15 seasons of the IPL and his second-worst strike rate, only behind IPL 2009. The form of India’s two foremost batsmen – albeit while playing for their franchises – has to cause concern in a T20 World Cup year, especially after the debacle in UAE 2021.
🚨 Limited Time Offer | Express Premium with ad-lite for just Rs 2/ day 👉🏽 Click here to subscribe 🚨
There is one crucial factor that stands out this season for Rohit – his dot-ball percentage has jumped to 52. It is by far the highest it has ever been in his T20 career. It has steadily crept up over the years, but even the last time the IPL was fully conducted in India, in 2019, it was far healthier, at 40.3.Best of Express PremiumUPSC Key – May 31, 2022: Why and What to know about ‘Kareem’s’ to Jaganna...PremiumIn Rajya Sabha list, BJP sticks to OBC-Dalit winning formulaPremiumSiddaramaiah interview: ‘If polls held for local bodies without OBC...PremiumNewsmaker | Iqbal Singh Chahal: Lauded for Mumbai’s Covid fightback...Premium
It has reflected in some of his dismissals this time; a succession of dot balls or a quiet phase would be followed by a slog, leading to some top-edged catches. Then, towards the latter half of the season, the softer dismissals began to occur, such as those typical slow-motion chips to mid-on.
Mumbai Indians’ season was practically over by the halfway stage, after a run of eight successive losses. MI had lost a great chunk of their core – the Pandya brothers, Trent Boult, and Quinton de Kock – to other franchises before and during the auction. Kieron Pollard was a shadow of his former self, Suryakumar Yadav was mostly injured, and Ishan Kishan failed to live up to the tag of the league’s costliest player. The bowling attack didn’t really click as a unit, and the young batting line-up was found wanting in its first season.

All this did appear to weigh skipper Rohit down, with the bat and on the field.
Failing to break free
Rohit has had the tendency to start with a bang after a sighter in the Powerplay; he’d then slow down but at times in the IPL – albeit not as much as it happens in international cricket – an acceleration phase would arrive later. It never did this time.
At the Brabourne Stadium, against Delhi Capitals, Rohit began reasonably well but managed a single boundary in his last 10 balls. Left-arm seamer Khaleel Ahmed troubled him constantly and he was even dropped before he tried to take on Kuldeep Yadav and failed to clear deep midwicket.
He went similarly against Lucknow Super Giants at Wankhede Stadium. After powering away to 30 off 18, he lost so much momentum he took just nine off his last 12 balls. That brought out a slog and he top-edged Krunal Pandya to short third man.
This middle-overs stalling also meant he took uncharacteristically high risks against bowlers he would usually not. (iplt20.com)
This middle-overs stalling also meant he took uncharacteristically high risks against bowlers he would usually not. After hitting just one four in his last 11 deliveries against Gujarat Titans, he went for a reverse-sweep off Rashid Khan, and was trapped leg-before.
Against Kolkata Knight Riders in Pune, he let the dots build up at the start itself and then suddenly had a swipe at Umesh Yadav – who was hard to target in the Powerplay this season – and top-edged a catch for 3 off 11.
Soft as you get
Halfway into the IPL, with MI on the brink of an early exit, arrived one of those characteristic half-pushes where Rohit instinctively brought the bat down on a full delivery coming into him from left-armer Mukesh Choudhary, and didn’t make any visible effort to keep it down. He could have got away if the ball went to midwicket or mid-on on the bounce, but during this wretched run he was having, it carried to the latter fielder for a second-ball duck.
MI ended DC’s playoff hopes in their last match but it was probably the lowest point of IPL 2022 for Rohit, the batsman. After taking as many as nine deliveries to get off the mark, he played a soft chip again off Anrich Nortje, giving catching practice to mid-on and departing for 2 off 13.
MI ended DC’s playoff hopes in their last match but it was probably the lowest point of IPL 2022 for Rohit, the batsman. (iplt20.com)
There was the odd occasion when a clear plan from the opposition worked; for instance, when Prasidh Krishna had a shortish backward point and bowled a wide one after several on the stumps, Rohit cut it straight to the fielder in the second over against Rajasthan Royals. But largely, it was a case of a tied-down or plateauing Rohit getting himself out.
‘Mental aspect’
Rohit said that he had been through such dips before too and spoke about having to handle the mental side of his game to come out of the slump. “A lot of things that I wanted to do didn’t happen,” Rohit had said after MI’s last match. “But this has happened with me earlier as well, so it’s not something I am going through for the first time.
“I know cricket doesn’t end here; there is a lot of cricket ahead. So, I need to take care of the mental aspect and think about how I can return to form and perform,” Rohit added. “It’s only a minor adjustment and I will try to work on that whenever there is some time off.”
Not unlike KL Rahul, Rohit does bat a bit differently for the Indian team than when he is playing for his IPL franchise. And he also has time off now before the England and Ireland tour, having been rested for the South Africa home T20Is.

T20I Squad – KL Rahul (Capt), Ruturaj Gaikwad, Ishan Kishan, Deepak Hooda, Shreyas Iyer, Rishabh Pant(VC) (wk),Dinesh Karthik (wk), Hardik Pandya, Venkatesh Iyer, Y Chahal, Kuldeep Yadav, Axar Patel, R Bishnoi, Bhuvneshwar, Harshal Patel, Avesh Khan, Arshdeep Singh, Umran Malik
— BCCI (@BCCI) May 22, 2022
There will always be the matter of Rohit’s workload now that he is leading India in all formats, plus MI in the IPL. Kohli donned all four hats for half a decade, and even with his standout fitness, his batting has hit a plateau in the past couple of years.
Since taking over in November, Rohit has already missed the South Africa tour due to injury, and since making 60 against West Indies in the first ODI in Ahmedabad at the start of February, he has also gone 11 international innings without a half-century.

Has the jadedness been building for a while, and did it become too much to bear during the course of a forgettable IPL for him and his team? Or did getting through a gruelling eight-week league, when the team was dumped out of it after four, itself become too hard on the mind and body? Some of his latter dismissals in the tournament might suggest so.
One can only hope though, that India’s captain sorts it out before walking out to open for the Test-series decider at Edgbaston on July 1.

!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s)
{if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?
n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};
if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;
n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;
t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0];
s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,’script’,
‘https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’);
fbq(‘init’, ‘444470064056909’);
fbq(‘track’, ‘PageView’);
.

Jio launches new plans with 3-month Disney+Hotstar subscription; starting at Rs 333

Jio launches new plans with 3-month Disney+Hotstar subscription; starting at Rs 333

Jio will start offering a 3-months subscription of Disney+Hotstar mobile to its prepaid users on select recharges. Jio customers can different recharge plans to avail of the free Disney+Hotstar Mobile subscription for 3 months. These users will also get unlimited voice, data, SMS and other benefits depending on the plan they select. This will allow users to stream movies, series, and live cricket matches on the platform.
Of course, users who are availing of the 3-month Disney+Hotstar subscription should need to continuously be on an active plan to continue streaming on the service.
In order to avail of this new offer, customers have to first recharge with one of the eligible plans. After that, they can sign in to the Disney+Hotstar app with the same Jio number that they recharged. An OTP will be sent to this number. After entering this OTP, the sign-in process is complete.

Rs 333 Jio cricket plan
The cheapest plan where users can avail of the Disney+Hotstar offer is the Rs 333 cricket plan which is valid for 28 days. Users who recharge with this pack will get 1.5GB per day, unlimited voice calls, and 100 SMS per day.
Other Jio plans with Disney+Hotstar
Jio has already had various other prepaid plans that bundle in a Disney+Hotstar subscription including plans for Rs 499, Rs 555, Rs 601, Rs 799, Rs 1,066, Rs 1,499 and Rs 4,199. You can read all about those other plans and what benefits you get with them here.

!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s)
{if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?
n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};
if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;
n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;
t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0];
s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,’script’,
‘https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’);
fbq(‘init’, ‘444470064056909’);
fbq(‘track’, ‘PageView’);
.