Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), the owner of Mumbai Indians, are set to acquire a 49% stake in Oval Invincibles. The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) on Thursday, January 30, hosted a ...
This addition makes it the sixth global cricket team under their ownership, which already includes franchises such as Mumbai Indians in IPL and WPL, MI Cape Town, MI New York and MI Cape Town.
Mumbai Indians’ parent company, Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), has made a significant move by acquiring a 49% stake in Surrey-based Oval Invincibles. This follows a virtual auction on ...
India's richest family has clinched a landmark deal to buy a 49% stake in the Oval Invincibles in a deal that will unite the London-based team with the ownership of the Indian Premier League's ...
First out of the blocks: Oval Invincibles are the first team to have been sold in the ECB's equity sale • ECB/Getty Images Mumbai Indians owners Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) are set to buy ...
Mumbai Indians skipper Hardik Pandya has expressed his delight at the way things panned out for them in the IPL mega auction After Mumbai Indians refused to retain Ishan Kishan, the wicket-keeper ...
The family owns the Mumbai Indians in the Indian Premier League through Reliance Industries. They became the first franchise, in 2017, to breach the $100m brand value mark but the cricket ...
The owners of Indian Premier League giants Mumbai Indians have agreed a deal to buy a stake in Oval Invincibles in a landmark moment for English cricket. Reliance Industries Limited, owned by ...
Reigning champions Oval Invincibles were the first of the eight Hundred teams to agree a private investment deal on Thursday when the owners of Mumbai Indians secured a 49 per cent stake for £ ...
Reliance is also in charge of Indian Premier League team Mumbai Indians. Knighthead Capital, the US group that includes legendary NFL quarterback Brady, then agreed to buy 49% in Birmingham Phoenix.
India-specific guidelines are crucial because Indians typically possess higher body fat percentages compared to other ethnic groups and tend to develop diabetes at lower BMI than others.
Sanjay Manjrekar was pretty bold in his assessment that AB de Villiers played for the wrong franchise when he represented RCB for 11 seasons.