‘Cricket’s inclusion in Olympics makes both commercial and sporting sense’
The Hindu
Cricket's potential inclusion in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics discussed by experts, highlighting the need for strategic planning and funding.
Cricket is far from a global sport, with the best versions of it confined to the Commonwealth nations. But Andy Anson, chair of the British Olympic Association (BOA) and also president of the Lancashire Cricket Club, said that cricket’s inclusion for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics was the right call.
Anson was speaking at a panel discussion titled ‘What it takes to win on and off the field’, organised by Lancashire Cricket and supported by the British Deputy High Commission, here on Wednesday, alongside Deepthi Bopaiah, CEO GoSports Foundation, Rajesh Menon, vice-president Royal Challengers Bangalore and Gaurav Manchanda, founder FC Bengaluru United.
“Cricket was a big omission from the Olympics,” Anson said. “It made absolute sense to include it now considering its reach. For the IOC, it made commercial sense and for cricket it made sporting sense to join the Olympic movement.“
With India being world cricket’s nerve centre and the country expressing a concrete desire to host the 2036 edition of the Olympics, a potential coming together of the two has excited many.
“Everyone would like the Olympics in India,” quipped Anson. “It is an untapped market. It is also such a diverse country with so many different people. In a sense it is similar to the diversity in Team Great Britain, something we celebrate.
“And that reflected in Tokyo 2020 where we won more medals across more sports than any other country. So India too should get the Olympics and 2036 would be right.”













