Will IPL Still Dominate in Five Years? Why the League Is Evolving, Not Fading Away
The Indian Premier League is no longer just a cricket tournament. It is now a year-round entertainment ecosystem, digital product, and global sports business rolled into one.
As IPL enters a phase where icons like MS Dhoni, Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma approach the final stretch of their careers, one question keeps coming up: will the IPL remain this popular five years from now?

The short answer is yes - but it may look very different from the version fans grew up watching.
From streaming-first audiences and interactive broadcasts to expanding schedules and franchise-driven fandoms, the IPL is heading toward a transformation rather than a decline.
IPL is shifting from television to digital-first consumption
One of the biggest changes shaping the future of IPL is how audiences consume cricket.
Traditional television ratings have shown signs of decline in recent seasons, especially among younger audiences. But that drop has been offset by explosive growth across streaming platforms, connected TVs, short-form clips, and second-screen engagement.
Fans no longer simply "watch" IPL matches.
They:
- track fantasy points live
- switch between multiple camera feeds
- consume player content on Instagram and YouTube
- engage in real-time social media banter
- follow dressing-room footage and mic'd-up content
The IPL is increasingly becoming a digital-native entertainment product.
This is why broadcasters and streaming platforms are aggressively investing in:
- multi-language commentary
- player cams
- real-time analytics
- interactive feeds
- creator-led coverage
- fan polls and gamification
The next generation may not consume IPL through a television set at all.
The IPL's biggest challenge is replacing its legendary stars
Every sporting league eventually faces a generational transition.
The IPL is now approaching that phase with MS Dhoni, Virat Kohli, and Rohit Sharma all nearing the twilight of their careers.
But history suggests the league is built strongly enough to survive that shift.
Indian cricket survived:
- Sachin Tendulkar's retirement
- the end of the Sehwag-Gambhir era
- the fading of Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina
because new stars kept emerging.
The IPL's greatest strength has always been its ability to manufacture new fandoms.
Today, players are already becoming franchise-driven stars with massive social media pull:
- Vaibhav Suryavanshi
- Priyansh Arya
- Noor Ahmad
- Tristan Stubbs
- Digvesh RathiThey
The league no longer depends entirely on Indian national-team legends.
Franchise identity itself has become powerful enough to sustain engagement.
Why IPL may need rule changes to avoid fan fatigue
While the IPL remains commercially dominant, criticism around the cricket itself has grown louder.
Fans and experts increasingly believe:
- Pitches are too batting friendly
- 250-plus totals are becoming repetitive
- The Impact Player rule has reduced tactical balance
- Bowlers are losing relevance
This is where the BCCI may eventually need to intervene.
If the league becomes too predictable or excessively batter-dominated, hardcore cricket audiences could slowly disengage.
Several former players have already called for:
- more sporting pitches
- balanced conditions
- reconsideration of Impact Sub rules
- greater value for bowlers and all-rounders
The IPL's long-term success may depend on protecting cricketing competitiveness alongside entertainment.
Arun Dhumal confirms BCCI wants a 94-match IPL
IPL chairman Arun Dhumal has already revealed that the BCCI hopes to expand the tournament from 74 to 94 matches in the next media rights cycle.
That would allow:
- Every team to play full home-and-away fixtures
- A complete double round-robin format
- Larger local fan engagement
"Ideally, we would want it because that would give an opportunity for all the teams to have nine home and nine away games," Dhumal told India Today.
However, the challenge remains the international calendar.
The ICC's Future Tours Programme currently limits available windows, meaning the BCCI would need:
- a larger dedicated IPL slot
- fewer bilateral commitments
- or potentially a split-season structure
Could IPL eventually split across the calendar?
Dhumal also hinted that IPL may eventually move toward a split-window structure.
That could mean:
- one phase in February-April
- another phase in September-October
Depending on the weather and international scheduling.
"The reason being, with the change in weather, it becomes very difficult to conduct games in that heat and humid environment," Dhumal explained.
This would represent a massive structural evolution for the tournament - something closer to how global football leagues operate.
IPL is becoming bigger than bilateral cricket
Perhaps the clearest sign of IPL's future lies in player priorities themselves.
Increasingly:
- Players value franchise leagues more heavily
- Broadcasters invest more in T20 products
- Audiences gravitate toward fast-paced entertainment formats
Dhumal even acknowledged that leagues may now offer more value than bilateral cricket.
"Every player is finding more value in IPL or any league vis-a-vis bilateral cricket," he said.
That statement reflects a broader global cricket shift.
The IPL is no longer competing with bilateral cricket.
In many ways, it is becoming the centrepiece of the sport itself.
So, will IPL fade away?
Highly unlikely.
If anything, the league is heading toward:
- greater commercial expansion
- more global influence
- deeper digital integration
- longer seasons
- stronger franchise identities
The format may evolve dramatically over the next five years.
But the IPL itself is not shrinking. It is becoming cricket's version of a global entertainment super-league.


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