
Kohli-backed WBL to roll out next year
The WBL is looking to transform a pastime for millions around the world into a cutting edge, made-for-TV experience via a heady mix of celebrity franchise owners, exotic locations and technological innovation. "It's an incredible sport which just hasn't been structured correctly for the past 50-60 years and everyone just dismisses it as a recreational activity," Mishra, the founder and CEO of sports tech firm League Sports Co, said in a video call from the United States.
"We are going to launch with six franchises in the first quarter of next year. It's going to be a team of four — two male and two female bowlers." Mishra did not go into detail about the format but said professional bowlers would compete in the core sport while celebrities would take part in auxiliary events, with teams collecting points throughout the season.
With its origins in ancient Egypt, bowling's heyday in the United States was in the 1960s and 70s when every town and suburb had its own alley. Even today, some 200 million people put on flat-soled shoes and take to the lanes every year, including 75 million in the US, Mishra said.
The WBL is by no means the first attempt to create a professional circuit in the Tenpin game, and American Don 'Mr Bowling' Carter was the first athlete in any sport to ink a $1 million sponsorship deal back in 1964.
What separates the WBL from previous attempts, Mishra says, is its global reach — the league is in the advanced stage of finalising franchises in Japan, South Korea, Singapore and India — and the ambitious vision. "Our first fundamental premise was — how can we take this and make this an aspirational product?" Mishra added. "We want to take two lanes and put them in iconic locations around the world — Hudson Yards in New York, Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, a variety of different locations in Dubai and India."
Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Betts bought the first announced franchise in May and the WBL pulled off another marketing coup when Kohli came on board as a strategic investor last month. Mishra did not provide financial details of Bett's purchase but said negotiations on the sale of the remaining franchises were in the final stages.
The league plans to simplify scoring, gather a host of celebrity and corporate backers, and use ball-tracking and other technology to create a product that works on television and digital platforms. Weaving complimentary programming featuring celebrity bowlers like Betts and Kohli around the core sport would make it an irresistible proposition for broadcasters, said Mishra.
"We already have many broadcasters lined up and a lot of them think this sport, the way we've designed it, can fit into their ultra-premium segment. "A lot of them believe they can bring in other influencers and celebrities, who come in and bowl as well. So there's a lot of 'shoulder programming' that you can create with the sport, which is not possible with a lot of other sports."
Mishra and Kohli know each other through their joint ownership of a team in the E1 electric powerboat world championship, and the cricketer's fondness for bowling came as a pleasant surprise as the WBL was being in the planning stage. "Over the years, I've met a lot of celebs who happen to be closet bowlers," Mishra said.
"We were speaking about various things about the team and it turned out that he has been bowling and watching it since he was 11-12. "That was a big surprise for me and we wanted him to be part of this. Hopefully we'll get him to bowl when he has more time for it."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
11 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Jessica Pegula backs US Open mixed doubles overhaul but urges more dialogue
World number four Jessica Pegula said the controversial mixed doubles event at the US Open could generate strong spectator interest but urged organisers to improve communication with players before making major format changes. The year's final Grand Slam announced in February that its mixed doubles competition, which will offer $1 million in prize money, would take place from August 19-20 ahead of the singles main draw the following week. The competition's format was also overhauled to feature a field of 16 teams - half of the 32 teams that competed last year - with eight entries based on the combined singles rankings of players and eight wild cards. Matches will be best of three sets, with short sets to four games, with no-advantage scoring, tiebreakers at four-all and a 10-point tiebreak in lieu of a third set. The final will be a best-of-three set match to six games. The move was described by defending U.S. Open champions Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori as a 'profound injustice' to doubles players, and Pegula, who is part of the WTA Player Council, said more communication was needed between organisers and players. 'I'm honoured that they asked me to play. It's going to be great, it's going to be fun and the fans will really enjoy it,' Pegula told reporters at the ongoing Cincinnati Open. 'At the same time, how they went about it, I didn't think was really great … We were like, Okay, you guys went rogue and changed the format and didn't tell anybody. You just did it. 'Did you talk to the players? Did you get their input about how it could be better? That's something that we as players are trying to work with them on, having that line of communication be a lot smoother. 'I feel like maybe if there was feedback about the format, then the (reaction) would be a little different, not so all over the place.' The U.S. Open said previously it understood the feedback from players but stressed that the reimagined event will elevate mixed doubles with a bigger spotlight and inspire more people to play the sport. Pegula, who will team up with fellow American Tommy Paul in the competition that also features pairs such as Carlos Alcaraz and Emma Raducanu and Jannik Sinner and Emma Navarro, said the move to limit the field could impact doubles players' earnings. 'It's not good when you have players saying they're upset that now they can't play, or that it's a way for them to make money and now they don't have that,' Pegula added. 'It's going to be a really fun event, but at the same time, I wish that they would have been communicating with us a little bit better.'


Business Recorder
11 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Brazil's Lula, China's Xi discuss BRICS, bilateral opportunities
BRASILIA/BEIJING: Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Chinese President Xi Jinping have discussed the role of the BRICS group of states and bilateral business over a phone call, according to Lula's office and Chinese state media said. The leaders spoke for an hour on Monday, agreeing on the role of the G20 and BRICS in defending multilateralism,' Brazil's presidency said in a statement. 'Both presidents also highlighted their willingness to continue identifying new business opportunities between the two economies,' the statement said. Lula said last week he would initiate a conversation about how to tackle Trump's tariffs with BRICS nations, after Trump dubbed the group 'anti-American' and threatened them with additional tariffs. Xi called BRICS a key platform for building consensus in the Global South and said China is ready to work with Brazil to set an example of unity and self-reliance among major Global South nations, Chinese state media Xinhua reported. Agriculture trade features notably in China and Brazil's relations. China, the world's biggest soybean importer, gets most of the commodity from Brazil and recently, numerous Brazilian coffee companies found entry into the Chinese market after the industry was hit by steep US tariffs. China last week also showed Brazil support in resisting the 'bullying behaviour' of imposing excessive tariffs, without naming the US. Xi described ties between the two countries as 'at their best in history', and said both should work together to address global challenges and promote the political settlement of the Ukraine crisis, Xinhua said.


Business Recorder
41 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
China urges firms not to use Nvidia's H20 chips, Bloomberg News reports
Chinese authorities have urged local companies to avoid using Nvidia's H20 processors, particularly for government-related purposes, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. Authorities have sent notices to a range of firms discouraging use of the less-advanced semiconductors, with the guidance taking a particularly strong stance against the use of Nvidia's H20s for any government or national security-related work by state enterprises or private companies, the report said. Reuters could not immediately confirm the report. Nvidia did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside regular business hours. Nvidia said in July that its products have no ' backdoors ' that would allow remote access or control after China raised concerns over potential security risks in the firm's H20 artificial intelligence chip. U.S. President Donald Trump suggested on Monday that he might allow Nvidia to sell a scaled-down version of its next-generation advanced GPU chip in China, despite deep-seated fears in Washington that China could harness U.S. artificial intelligence capabilities to supercharge its military. The move could open the door to China securing more advanced computing power from the U.S. even as the two countries battled for technology supremacy, critics said.