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Cricket: IPL suspended amid India-Pakistan tensions

May 9, 2025

The Indian Premier League, one of sport's richest competitions, has been suspended while the Pakistan Super League has moved. Cricket is significant for both nations, but what does the conflict mean for the sport?

Virat Kohli flicks a ball to the leg side as Pakistan's wicketkeeper looks on
India beat Pakistan when the sides met in Dubai earlier this year in the ICC Champions TrophyImage: Altaf Qadri/AP/picture alliance

What has happened between India and Pakistan?

India and Pakistan are engaged in conflict in Kashmir, a disputed territory between the two countries. Parts of Kashmir are controlled by India, Pakistan and China. India has carried out airstrikes, which it says targeted militant groups in the region in recent days, with Pakistan describing them as an "act of war" and vowing to retaliate. Both sides have since been launching attacks on each other.

The current flashpoint started in April when 26 tourists in India-administered Kashmir were killed. But the region has been disputed for centuries, eventually leading to the current uneasy three-way administration.

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What is happening with the IPL and PSL?

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has suspended the Indian Premier League (IPL) for a week amid the escalating conflict.

"While the BCCI reposes full faith in the strength and preparedness of our armed forces, the Board considered it prudent to act in the collective interest of all stakeholders. At this critical juncture, the BCCI stands firmly with the nation. We express our solidarity with the Government of India, the Armed Forces and the people of our country," read a BCCI statement released on May 9.

"Further updates regarding the new schedule and venues of the tournament will be announced in due course after a comprehensive assessment of the situation in consultation with relevant authorities and stakeholders."

The night before that statement, a clash between the Punjab Kings and the Delhi Capitals in Dharamsala was abandoned due to "a power outage in the area, [affecting] one of the light towers at the HPCA stadium," according to the IPL.


The IPL has become on of the world's most lucrative sports leagues, with plenty of foreign players presentImage: Mahesh Kumar A./AP/picture alliance

There is also turmoil in the less-established Pakistan Super League (PSL). Hours before the IPL announcement, the Pakistan Cricket Board decided to move the remaining eight matches of its tournament  to the United Arab Emirates, with dates also yet to be confirmed. That came amid claims from authorities that  an Indian drone had fallen inside the complex of a stadium ahead of a PSL match.

"The PCB has always stood by the position that politics and sports need to be kept apart. However, in view of the extremely irresponsible and dangerous Indian act of targeting the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, which was manifestly done to disrupt the ongoing HBL Pakistan Super League X, the PCB has decided to shift the remaining matches to UAE so that the domestic as well as foreign cricketers, who are our precious guests, can be saved from the possible reckless targeting by India."

Players from around the world are reportedly weighing up whether to leave the region. PSL organizers have denied this. Various international cricket boards with players competing in the PSL have also said they are monitoring the situation. While some players from Pakistan played in early versions of the IPL, none has since 2008 while Indian players are prohibited from playing in T20 leagues outside of India.

How has this affected cricket outside the IPL and PSL?

Relations between the countries mean the teams, whether men's or women's, do not face each other outside of global events organized by the International Cricket Council (ICC). These are usually short-format World Cups (Twenty20 or 50-over cricket). The last time the men's teams met in a Test match, the longer and more storied version of the game, was in 2007. Both the women's and the men's team have recently met in short-format global tournaments on neutral ground, the men in February and the women in 2024. 

But the current conflict has had an impact on some players, at least in terms of their social media. Recently, India blocked the accounts of current stars Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan and retired players Shahid Afridi and Wasim Akram in India while the Instagram of Pakistan's ex-prime minister and cricket captain Imran Khan was also blocked.

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It could also set back cricketing relations still further. India men's coach Gautam Gambhir, a former India player and former MP for Narendra Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) party, said there "should not be anything between India and Pakistan" until the situation is resolved.

When are India and Pakistan next set to play each other?

Meetings are few and far between, with the next fixture in the men's game likely to be at the Twenty20 World Cup cohosted by champions India and Sri Lanka in 2026. The ICC has already ruled that games between the two sides should be held at neutral venues until at least 2027.

But Gambhir's statement will first be tested at the Women's 50-over World Cup this September, which will also be hosted by India. Pakistan have qualified for the tournament and the round robin system in the group stage means the countries will be slated to face each other, albeit on neutral ground. What happens to that match may provide a first indication of where cricket relations between the pair could be headed in the coming months and years. 

Edited by: Chuck Penfold

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