The Numbers They Don’t Like to Say Aloud
Advertising and viewership data tell the story more honestly than press releases.
A 10-second ad slot during the Champions Trophy 2017 cost around USD 12,000. That figure climbed to USD 20,000 in the ICC T20 World Cup, USD 25,000 in 2022, USD 36,000 by the 2023 World Cup, and now sits near USD 45,000 for the Champions Trophy 2025.
A single India–Pakistan match can generate USD 4–6 million in digital advertising alone, with sponsorships adding USD 38–45 million more.
Roughly 63% of ICC global tournament revenue is linked to India–Pakistan games. India contributes close to 78% of ICC revenue overall, with around 70% of broadcast income originating there.
This is the leverage.
And it is also the vulnerability.
Why the BCCI Wants Pakistan Reprimanded
The anxiety from the Board of Control for Cricket in India is not about a single forfeited match. It is about precedent.
If Pakistan can refuse once and absorb the cost without folding, the assumption that financial gravity alone guarantees compliance weakens. That is why the response escalated so quickly to threats—revenue cuts, broadcaster lawsuits, clauses invoked via television panels before formal notices exist.
It is an attempt to restore hierarchy, not enforce law.
