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Cricket News Updated Jun 8, 2026

ECB Moves India T20Is Earlier to 10 PM IST for Max Viewership

The England and Wales Cricket Board has moved the start time for three floodlit T20Is against India to 5:30 PM local time (10 PM IST) to boost television viewership. This change from the usual 6:30 PM start was made in consultation with broadcasters Sky Sports and Sony Sports Network. The financial report highlights ECB's reliance on high-value broadcast series, particularly those featuring India. All three ODIs featuring Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli are sold out, while 15-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi could make his debut and become the youngest Indian cricketer.

ECB moves timings up for India T20Is; to be broadcast at 10 PM IST

London, June 8

The England and Wales Cricket Board have changed the timings for England's floodlit T20Is against India to maximise TV viewership, shifting from the initial 6.30 pm local time to 5.30 pm.

Team India will be touring England for eight white-ball games, including three ODIs and five T20Is from July 1-19, as per ESPNCricinfo. The three evening matches of the T20I leg of the series have been shifted to start an hour earlier, after discussions with the broadcasters.

The start time for England's home matches is finalised after consultations between the ECB, venues, opposition board involved and domestic/overseas broadcasters, here in this case, Sky Sports (UK) and the Sony Sports Network (India).

The change in the start time of 6:30 PM, which had become a standard start time in recent seasons, highlights ECB's reliance on "high-value broadcast series", especially the ones featuring India, which was revealed in the recently published financial report of ECB.

ECB is projected to register a profit this year due to India's tour, but anticipates losses in 2027 despite the men's team playing the highly anticipated Ashes series against Australia at home.

"Attention should be drawn to the fact that the ECB's revenues are inherently cyclical, reflecting the scheduling of high-value broadcast series by opposition," the report said as quoted by ESPNCricinfo.

The tickets for the tour went on sale last year, with all three ODIs, a format receiving a popularity boost by the presence of Indian superstars Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, sold out, and only a few hundred T20Is tickets remain.

Sunset during the peak English summer takes place after 9 PM, meaning all five T20Is could be completed after floodlights come into play.

Indian squad for the T20I series, a 16-man strong line-up featuring 15-year-old sensation Vaibhav Sooryavanshi and newly-appointed skipper Shreyas Iyer, who is replacing the T20 World Cup-winning skipper Suryakumar Yadav.

Cricket Ireland has also experienced an uptick in interest in their two home T20Is against India on June 26 and 28, which could see Sooryavanshi make his international debut, becoming the youngest Indian to do so, breaking legend Sachin Tendulkar's record, which has been intact since 1989. Both matches were sold out before India announced the squad, with the Civil Service ground at Stormont in Belfast set to operate at a capacity of around 4,500.

— ANI

Reader Comments

James A

As a neutral observer, this feels like the ECB bends over backwards for Indian broadcasters. 5:30 PM local time is early for English crowds, but I guess the Indian TV dollars speak loudly. Still, it's fair—India brings the money, they get the timing.

Priya S

Honestly, I'm just glad the ODIs are sold out—Rohit and Kohli in English conditions is *chef's kiss*. But why is Shreyas Iyer captain for T20Is? SKY was doing brilliantly. Also, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi better not be rushed into international cricket too soon. 😅

David E

Interesting that Ireland's sold-out matches come before the England series. Cricket getting love in non-traditional places is great to see. But is the ECB really projecting losses in 2027 despite an Ashes year? That's a shocking admission—shows how dependent they are on India.

Manish T

ECB ka finance report toh interesting hai! "High-value broadcast series" ka matlab hai India. 💰 But I think it's a win-win—Indian fans get prime-time cricket, and ECB gets the money to develop their domestic game. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi though... 15 years old! Hope he doesn't face too much pressure.

Sarah B

A respectful criticism: moving the start time to 5:30 PM local means fewer English fans can attend after work. That's not fair to the home crowd. But from an Indian viewer's perspective, 10 PM is brilliant. Just hope the players cope with the twilight transition with floodlights coming on so early.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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