BRPL Aims to Give Small-Town Cricket Talent a Structured Platform

The Beyond Reach Premier League (BRPL) aims to provide structured opportunities and recognition to cricket players from small towns and rural India. Co-founder Sushil Sharma emphasizes that talent should be judged by performance, not background or geography. The league is inspired by Sharma's own childhood experiences playing tennis-ball cricket without a proper platform. BRPL is open to aspiring cricketers aged 18-40 from across India.

Key Points: BRPL: Structured Opportunity for Small-Town Cricket Talent

  • BRPL focuses on small-town and rural cricket talent
  • League provides structured opportunities and professional management
  • Co-founder Sushil Sharma draws from personal childhood experience
  • BRPL aims to empower players through discipline, teamwork, and identity
3 min read

"BRPL aims to provide structured opportunity and recognition to small-town talent," says co- founder Sushil Sharma

BRPL co-founder Sushil Sharma aims to bridge the gap in Indian cricket by providing structured opportunities and recognition to players from small towns and rural India.

"BRPL is designed to give young players from small towns and rural India something they often lack -- structured opportunity and recognition. - Sushil Sharma"

New Delhi, April 25

The newly launched Beyond Reach Premier League is focused on bridging a long-standing gap in Indian cricket by offering structured opportunities and recognition to players from small towns and rural regions.

According to a release, the league is built on the belief that talent should be nurtured and showcased through the right platform, regardless of background.

"BRPL is designed to give young players from small towns and rural India something they often lack -- structured opportunity and recognition," said Sushil Sharma, Co-Founder & CEO of Beyond Reach Premier League (BRPL).

"We are creating an ecosystem where talent is judged by performance, not by background or geography. Through organised tournaments, professional management, digital visibility, and competitive exposure, BRPL gives these players a real stage to showcase their skills," he added.

For its founders, the inspiration traces back to childhood days spent playing tennis-ball cricket, a format that thrives in India's small grounds and crowded streets.

"As a child, I used to play cricket with a tennis ball in small grounds and local streets, just like thousands of kids across India. I had passion, belief, and the hunger to prove myself. Every match felt important, every run felt like a step closer to something bigger," said Sushil Sharma.

Yet, despite the passion, a critical gap persisted. "But there was one thing missing -- a proper platform. There was no structured opportunity to showcase talent, no visibility, no pathway forward. Over time, I realised that talent alone is not enough. Dreams need direction. Skills need exposure. Passion needs opportunity," he added.

That realisation eventually became a commitment. "When I couldn't find that platform for myself, I made a promise, one day, I would create it. BRPL was born from that promise. It is my way of ensuring that the dreams which once remained incomplete in my childhood do not remain incomplete for the next generation," said Mr Sushil Sharma.

BRPL's core mission is centred on providing a structured opportunity to players from small towns and rural India, regions often rich in raw ability but limited in exposure.

But for BRPL, empowerment extends beyond performances and scorecards.

"It builds confidence. It teaches discipline and teamwork. It gives young players identity and belief in themselves," said the BRPL founder.

BRPL also reflects a broader belief in the untapped potential of tennis-ball cricket, long celebrated at the grassroots but rarely viewed through a professional lens.

"Yes, absolutely. Tennis cricket already has massive grassroots popularity across India. The passion exists. The participation exists. What it needs is structure and vision."

BRPL is dedicated to nurturing cricket talent through world-class training, competitive leagues, and professional coaching, with a mission to elevate the game and empower the next generation of champions.

BRPL is open to aspiring and semi-professional cricketers aged 18-40, welcoming participants from 28 states and 8 Union Territories across India.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Arun Y
Good initiative but I hope it's not just another money-making league. Need to see actual match footage, not just press releases. Still, the vision is admirable — small towns in India deserve this. 😊
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Ramesh W
I'm all for structured opportunities but ₹10,000 registration fee is steep for small-town players. How many rural kids can afford that? For the mission to be genuine, BRPL should partner with state cricket associations or offer scholarships. My nephew from a village in Rajasthan would love to participate but finances are a block.
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Priya S
As someone who grew up playing tennis-ball cricket in the gullies of Lucknow, this resonates deeply. The raw talent we had but no one to guide us. BRPL's focus on digital visibility is key — these days if you're not on YouTube or Instagram, you don't exist in the sports ecosystem. Hope they make it genuinely accessible across all states, not just tier-2 cities.
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Vikram R
The age bracket 18-40 is sensible — gives a chance to late bloomers. But tennis-ball cricket is very different from leather-ball cricket; hope BRPL also helps players transition to proper equipment and playing conditions. Otherwise it's just a local tournament with branding. Neutral on optimism. 🤔
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Suresh O
Very inspiring story of Sushil Sharma converting his childhood dream into reality. We need more such platforms for grassroots sports. In a country obsessed with cricket, the irony is how many talented cricketers from small towns get ignored because they don't have 'connections'. BRPL must ensure transparent selection. Good luck! 👏

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