Premier Badminton League

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Premier Badminton League
Most recent season or competition:
2020 Premier Badminton League
File:Premier Badminton League logo.png
FormerlyIndian Badminton League
SportBadminton
Inaugural season2016
AdministratorBadminton Association of India
CountryIndia
Venue(s)Hyderabad, Mumbai, Chennai, Bangalore , Ahmedabad, New Delhi, Lucknow and Guwahati
Most recent
champion(s)
Bengaluru Raptors (2nd title)
Most titlesBengaluru Raptors (2 titles)
TV partner(s)List of broadcasters
Sponsor(s)Star Sports, Bridgestone
Tournament formatRound-robin and knock-out
Official websitepbl-india.com

Premier Badminton League (PBL) is a team badminton league operating in India. Sportz & Live Private Limited (Sportzlive) has the rights to operate and execute the Premier Badminton League.

The inaugural season of PBL was held from 2 to 17 January 2016. Delhi Dashers (formerly Delhi Acers) defeated Mumbai Rockets in the final to clinch the title. The second season began on 22 December 2016 and came to end on 14 January 2017 with the Chennai Smashers headed by P. V. Sindhu clinching the title in the finals. The third season began on 23 December 2017 and came to end on 14 January 2018 with Hyderabad Hunters headed by Carolina Marín emerging as the champions. Bengaluru Raptors won the last two editions in 2018-19 and 2020, becoming the only team to win the title twice.

Sponsorship[edit]

Period Sponsor Tournament
2016 India Star Sports Star Sports Premier Badminton League
2017–2019 United Kingdom Vodafone Vodafone Premier Badminton League
2020–Present India Star Sports Star Sports Premier Badminton League

Organisation[edit]

Tournament format[edit]

Teams play each other in round-robin format in league stage. Each team plays six ties in the league stage in which each tie consists of five matches. The matches played are two Men's singles, Women's singles, Men's doubles and Mixed doubles. Each of these matches are best of 3 games.[1] Teams earn one point for each regular match win; in addition, each team must choose a Trump match, where a win is worth two points, and a loss subtracts one point.[2] After league stage, the top four teams in the table will qualify for the knockout stage. The winners of semi-finals goes into the final, in which the winner will be crowned the PBL champions.

Player auctions[edit]

The player auctions are usually held at the end of each year for the subsequent season. Professional players from around the world enter the bidding where teams buy them.[3] The league has helped players more than double their annual earnings from prize money in the year 2018. According to the prominent Danish player Victor Axelsen, this was a crucial part of their annual income.[4] Each franchise has a purse of 2 crore (US$280,000) and the maximum a team can spend on a single player was 77 lakh (US$110,000) in the most recent 2020 auction.[5]

Fifth Season[edit]

The fifth season auctions were held on 26 November 2019 in New Delhi.[6] Each franchise had a purse of 2 crore (US$280,000), and were not allowed to spend more than 77 lakh (US$110,000) on a single player.[5][6] The highest paid players were the Taiwanese Tai Tzu-ying and Indian P. V. Sindhu, both sold for the maximum amount of 77 lakh (US$110,000) to Bengaluru Raptors and Hyderabad Hunters respectively. Indian doubles player Satwiksairaj Rankireddy was the next highest, bought for 62 lakh (US$87,000) by Chennai Superstarz.[7]

2020 being the Olympic year, key players like Saina Nehwal, Kidambi Srikanth, Carolina Marín, Victor Axelsen and others have decided to skip the season.[8][9]

Some of the players were traded between Mumbai, Chennai and Pune teams ahead of the season.[10]

Franchises[edit]

Currently seven franchises compete in the league.[11] There were nine franchises in the previous season(2018–19).[12][11][7][10]

Current Franchises[edit]

Franchise name City Owner(s) Highest Paid (Male) Highest Paid (Female) Home ground
Hyderabad Hunters Hyderabad Agile Security Force India Sourabh Verma India P. V. Sindhu Gachibowli Indoor Stadium, Hyderabad
Bengaluru Raptors Bangalore Matrix Teamwork Badminton Pvt. Ltd India B. Sai Praneeth Chinese Taipei Tai Tzu-ying Koramangala Indoor Stadium, Bangalore
Awadhe Warriors Lucknow Sahara India Pariwar South Korea Ko Sung-hyun United States Beiwen Zhang Babu Banarasi Das Indoor Stadium, Lucknow
Mumbai Rockets Mumbai Devyani Leisures South Korea Kim Gi-jung Indonesia Pia Zebadiah Bernadet Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Indoor Stadium, Mumbai
Chennai Superstarz Chennai R. Sivakumar, Aditya Meesala India Satwiksairaj Rankireddy England Jessica Pugh Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, Chennai
Northeastern Warriors Guwahati The Eastern Warriors Pvt Ltd Hong Kong Lee Cheuk Yiu South Korea Kim Ha-na Karmabir Nabin Chandra Bordoloi Indoor Stadium, Guwahati
Pune 7 Aces Pune Tapsee Pannu, KRI Indonesia Hendra Setiawan England Gabby Adcock Shri Shivchhatrapati Sports Complex

Seasons[edit]

First Season (Season 1)[edit]

In 2016, the league was renamed from Indian Badminton League to Premier Badminton League, and still followed same format. This first season of the PBL started on 2 January 2016 and concluded on 17 January 2016. The four teams to proceed to the semi-finals were Delhi Dashers, Chennai Smashers, Awadhe Warriors and Mumbai Rockets. Delhi beat Chennai 4-3 and Mumbai Rockets beat Awadhe Warriors 3–1 to proceed to the final. Delhi Dashers won the tournament after beating Mumbai Rockets 4–3.

Second Season (Season 2)[edit]

The second season of the Premier Badminton League started on 1 January 2017 and concluded on 14 January 2017. It followed the same format as the earlier league, and the four teams to proceed to the semi-finals were Awadhe Warriors, Mumbai Rockets, Chennai Smashers and Hyderabad Hunters. Chennai Smashers beat Awadhe Warriors 4-1 and Mumbai Rockets beat Hyderabad Hunters 3-(-1) to proceed to the final. Chennai Smashers won the tournament after beating Mumbai Rockets 4–3.

Third Season (Season 3)[edit]

The third season of the PBL started on 23 December 2017 and concluded on 14 January 2018. Hyderabad Hunters were crowned the champions after they beat Bengaluru Blasters 4–3 in the final tie.

Fourth Season (Season 4)[edit]

The fourth season of the PBL was played from 22 December 2018 to 13 January 2019. In the fourth season Bengaluru Raptors took their first title after beating Mumbai Rockets in the final.

Fifth Season (Season 5)[edit]

The fifth season of the PBL started on 20 January 2020 and concluded on 9 February 2020. Seven teams participated in the season. Delhi Dashers and Ahmedabad Smash Masters did not participate in this edition. Total prize money of 6 crore (US$840,000) was announced by Sportzlive for the tournament.[13] Bengaluru Raptors beat Northeastern Warriors 4–2 in the finals to win their second title. It was also their second consecutive title in PBL.

Tournament seasons and results[edit]

Five seasons of PBL have been played since the first season in 2016. They are:

PBL season results[14]
Season Final Final venue Number of

teams

Winner Result Runner-up
Season 1

Details

Delhi Acers 4–3 Mumbai Rockets DDA Badminton and Squash Stadium, New Delhi 6
Season 2

Details

Chennai Smashers 4–3 Mumbai Rockets DDA Badminton and Squash Stadium, New Delhi 6
Season 3

Details

Hyderabad Hunters 4–3 Bengaluru Blasters Kanteerava Indoor Stadium, Bangalore 8
Season 4

Details

Bengaluru Raptors 4–3 Mumbai Rockets Kanteerava Indoor Stadium, Bangalore 9
Season 5

Details

Bengaluru Raptors 4–2 Northeastern Warriors Gachibowli Indoor Stadium, Hyderabad 7

Teams' performances[edit]

Season
(No. of teams)
Season 1
(6)
Season 2
(6)
Season 3
(8)
Season 4
(9)
Season 5
(7)
Hyderabad Hunters 5th SF 1st SF 6th
Bengaluru Raptors (formerly Bengaluru Top Guns and Bengaluru Blasters) 6th 5th 2nd 1st 1st
Awadhe Warriors SF SF 5th SF 5th
Mumbai Rockets 2nd 2nd 8th 2nd 7th
Chennai Superstarz (formerly Chennai Smashers) SF 1st 6th 6th SF
Northeastern Warriors DNE 7th 8th 2nd
Pune 7 Aces DNE 5th SF
Delhi Dashers (formerly Delhi Acers) 1st 6th SF 9th Template:CNone
Ahmedabad Smash Masters DNE SF 7th Template:CNone
1st Champions
2nd Runner-up
SF Semi-finalists
Template:Dropped Team did not exist in the respective season
Template:CNone Team defunct
Teams that no longer exist

Team rosters[edit]

Template:Divhide

Delhi Acers Hyderabad Hunters Mumbai Rockets Awadhe Warriors Bengaluru Blasters Chennai Smashers
India Ajay Jayaram India Siril Verma India Prannoy Kumar India B. Sai Praneeth India Anand Pawar France Brice Leverdez
England Rajiv Ouseph India Parupalli Kashyap India R.M.V. Gurusaisdutt India Sourabh Verma India Sameer Verma Indonesia Sony Dwi Kuncoro
Indonesia Tommy Sugiarto Malaysia Lee Chong Wei India Ruthwika Gadde Thailand S. Tanongsak India K. Srikanth Indonesia Simon Santoso
India P. C. Thulasi Thailand Supanida Katethong China Han Li India Saina Nehwal China Suo Di India P.V. Sindhu
India Shikha Gautam India K. Nandagopal China Liu Zi Die India G. Vrushali India B. Sumeeth Reddy India Sri Krishna Priya
India Akshay Dewalkar India Satwiksairaj Rankireddy India Manu Attri China Cai Yun Malaysia Tan Boon Heong India Pranav Chopra
Malaysia Koo Kien Keat Indonesia Markis Kido Thailand Chayut Triyachart Indonesia Hendra Gunawan Malaysia Koo Kien Keat England Chris Adcock
Malaysia Tan Boon Heong Denmark Carsten Mogensen Russia Vladimir Ivanov Thailand Bodin Isara Denmark Joachim Fischer Nielsen Canada Toby Ng
India Aparna Balan India Jwala Gutta Denmark Mathias Boe India K. Maneesha Scotland Robert Blair India N. Sikki Reddy
England Gabby Adcock India J. Meghana Denmark Kamilla Rytter Juhl Denmark Christinna Pedersen India Ashwini Ponnappa Indonesia Pia Zebadiah Bernadet

Template:Divhide

Template:Divhide

Delhi Acers Awadhe Warriors Mumbai Rockets Hyderabad Hunters Bengaluru Blasters Chennai Smashers
DenmarkJan Ø. Jørgensen IndiaSrikanth Kidambi IndiaAjay Jayaram IndiaB. Sai Praneeth DenmarkViktor Axelsen IndiaP. V. Sindhu
IndiaSiril Verma Hong KongWong Wing Ki IndiaPrannoy Kumar IndiaSameer Verma IndiaSourabh Varma IndiaArundhati Pantawane
South KoreaSon Wan-ho IndiaSaina Nehwal IndiaShreyansh Jaiswal EnglandRajiv Ouseph ThailandBoonsak Ponsana IndiaParupalli Kashyap
IndiaAakarshi Kashyap IndiaRituparna Das South KoreaSung Ji-hyun SpainCarolina Marín IndiaGadde Ruthvika Shivani ThailandTanongsak Saensomboonsuk
ThailandNitchaon Jindapol ThailandBodin Isara IndiaVrushali Gummadi IndiaSri Krishna Priya Hong KongCheung Ngan Yi IndonesiaTommy Sugiarto
IndiaAkshay Dewalkar MalaysiaGoh V Shem ThailandNipitphon Phuangphuapet IndiaSatwiksairaj Rankireddy IndiaN. Sikki Reddy EnglandGabby Adcock
RussiaIvan Sozonov IndonesiaMarkis Kido IndiaMohita Sahdev MalaysiaTan Boon Heong IndiaAshwini Ponnappa IndiaRamya Tulasi
RussiaVladimir Ivanov IndiaPrajakta Sawant PolandNadieżda Zięba MalaysiaTan Wee Kiong IndiaPranav Chopra IndiaB. Sumeeth Reddy
IndiaJwala Gutta ThailandSavitree Amitrapai IndiaChirag Shetty Hong KongChau Hoi Wah South KoreaKo Sung-hyun EnglandChris Adcock
IndiaK. Maneesha IndiaAditya Joshi South KoreaLee Yong-dae IndiaMeghana Jakkampudi South KoreaYoo Yeon-seong DenmarkMads Pieler Kolding
IndiaSanjana Santosh
IndiaTarun Kona

Template:Divhide

Template:Divhide

Ahmedabad Smash Masters Awadhe Warriors Bengaluru Blasters Chennai Smashers
India H. S. Prannoy India Saina Nehwal Denmark Viktor Axelsen India P. V. Sindhu
India K. Nandagopal Denmark Christinna Pedersen Malaysia Chong Wei Feng India Aditya Joshi
Denmark Kamilla Rytter Juhl India Harshit Aggarwal South Korea Kim Sa-rang India B. Sumeeth Reddy
Template:Country data TAI Tai Tzu-ying Indonesia Hendra Setiawan Scotland Kirsty Gilmour France Brice Leverdez
Hong Kong Lee Chun Hei India Srikanth Kidambi India Manu Attri England Chris Adcock
India Siril Verma India Mahima Aggarwal Denmark Mathias Boe India Daniel Farid
India Sourabh Varma Hong Kong Or Chin Chung India N. Sikki Reddy England Gabby Adcock
India Sri Krishna Priya Kudaravalli India Parupalli Kashyap India Rituparna Das Thailand Tanongsak Saensomboonsuk
Bulgaria Stefani Stoeva India Sai Uttejita Rao Chukka India Sanjana Santosh India Vrushali Gummadi
Hong Kong Law Cheuk Him Hong Kong Tang Chun Man India Subhankar Dey Template:Country data TAI Lee Yang
Delhi Dashers Hyderabad Hunters Mumbai Rockets North Eastern Warriors
South Korea Sung Ji-hyun Spain Carolina Marín South Korea Son Wan-ho Template:Country data TAI Wang Tzu-wei
India Arathi Sara Sunil India Anoushka Parikh India Arjun M.R. India Ajay Jayaram
India Ashwini Ponnappa India B. Sai Praneeth United States Zhang Beiwen India Chirag Shetty
Russia Ivan Sozonov South Korea Lee Hyun-il Malaysia Tan Boon Heong India Gadde Ruthvika Shivani
India Pranav Chopra Indonesia Markis Kido Bulgaria Gabriela Stoeva South Korea Kim Gi-jung
India Gurusai Dutt Indonesia Pia Zebadiah Bernadet India Tarun Kona Canada Michelle Li
India Shreyanshi Pardeshi India Rahul Yadav Chittaboina India Kuhoo Garg India Prajakta Sawant
China Tian Houwei India Rasika Raje South Korea Lee Yong-dae India Pratul Joshi
Russia Vladimir Ivanov India Satwiksairaj Rankireddy India Sameer Verma India Sanyogita Ghorpade
Hong Kong Wong Wing Ki South Korea Yoo Yeon-seong India Sanyam Shukla South Korea Shin Baek-cheol

Template:Divhide Template:Divhide

Ahmedabad Smash Masters Awadhe Warriors Bengaluru Raptors
Denmark Viktor Axelsen South Korea Son Wan-ho India Srikanth Kidambi
India Anoushka Parikh India Ashwini Ponnappa Indonesia Mohammad Ahsan
India N. Sikki Reddy Denmark Mathias Christiansen Indonesia Hendra Setiawan
India Satwiksairaj Rankireddy Taiwan Lee Yang India B. Sai Praneeth
Hong Kong Lee Chun Hei United States Zhang Beiwen India Mithun Manjunath
India K. Nandagopal South Korea Lee Dong-keun England Lauren Smith
Scotland Kirsty Gilmour India Sanyogita Ghorpade India Sanjana Santosh
India Vaishnavi Bhale India Gurusai Dutt England Marcus Ellis
Malaysia Liew Daren India Rasika Raje Vietnam Vũ Thị Trang
India Sourabh Varma India Arjun M.R. Vietnam Nguyễn Tiến Minh
Chennai Smashers Delhi Dashers Hyderabad Hunters
South Korea Sung Ji-hyun India H. S. Prannoy India P. V. Sindhu
England Gabby Adcock China Chai Biao South Korea Eom Hye-won
England Chris Adcock China Wang Sijie South Korea Kim Sa-rang
India Rutaparna Panda Thailand Maneepong Jongjit Thailand Bodin Isara
India Sumeeth Reddy Russia Evgeniya Kosetskaya India Sai Uttejita Rao Chukka
India Saili Rane Indonesia Tommy Sugiarto South Korea Lee Hyun-il
England Rajiv Ouseph India Harika Veludurthi India Arun George
India Parupalli Kashyap India Vighnesh Devlekar India Meghana Jakkampudi
Hong Kong Or Chin Chung India Chirag Sen Netherlands Mark Caljouw
Malaysia Chong Wei Feng Chinese Taipei Lee Chia-hsin India Rahul Yadav Chittaboina
Mumbai Rockets North Eastern Warriors Pune 7 Aces
South Korea Lee Yong-dae India Saina Nehwal Spain Carolina Marín
Indonesia Pia Zebadiah Bernadet South Korea Kim Ha-na India Chirag Shetty
South Korea Kim Gi-jung South Korea Yoo Yeon-seong Denmark Mathias Boe
India Shreyanshi Pardeshi Thailand Tanongsak Saensomboonsuk Russia Vladimir Ivanov
India Sameer Verma China Tian Houwei Denmark Line Kjærsfeldt
India Kuhoo Garg India K. Maneesha India Lakshya Sen
India Manu Attri Chinese Taipei Liao Min-chun France Brice Leverdez
Denmark Anders Antonsen India Dhruv Kapila Indonesia Sony Dwi Kuncoro
India Pratul Joshi India Siril Verma India Ajay Jayaram
India Anura Prabhudesai India Rituparna Das India Prajakta Sawant

Template:Divhide Template:Divhide

Teams Awadhe Warriors Bengaluru Raptors Chennai Superstarz Hyderabad Hunters Mumbai Rockets Northeastern Warriors Pune 7 Aces
Coach India Anup Sridhar India Arvind Bhat India Vijaydeep Singh India Rajendra Kumar Jakkampudi India Amrish Shinde Indonesia Edwin Iriawan Denmark Joachim Persson
Squads India Ajay Jayaram India Ansal Yadav India B. Sumeeth Reddy India Gadde Ruthvika Shivani India Kuhoo Garg India Ashmita Chaliha India Arjun M.R.
India Subhankar Dey India Arun George India Dhruv Kapila India N. Sikki Reddy India Parupalli Kashyap India Kaushal Dharmamer India Chirag Shetty
India Tanvi Lad India B. Sai Praneeth India Gayathri Gopichand India Priyanshu Rajawat India Pranav Chopra India Krishna Prasad Garaga India Mithun Manjunath
India Medha Shashidharan India Lakshya Sen India P. V. Sindhu India Ramchandran Shlok India Rutaparna Panda India Rituparna Das
India Sankar Muthusamy Subramanian India Sourabh Verma India Shreyansh Jaiswal
India Sanjana Santosh India Shreyanshi Pardeshi
India Sathish Kumar Karunakaran
India Satwiksairaj Rankireddy
Denmark Christinna Pedersen Chinese Taipei Tai Tzu-ying England Jessica Pugh England Ben Lane Indonesia Pia Zebadiah Bernadet Canada Michelle Li England Chris Adcock
Hong Kong Wong Wing Ki France Brice Leverdez Indonesia Tommy Sugiarto England Sean Vendy South Korea Kim Gi-jung Hong Kong Lee Cheuk Yiu England Gabby Adcock
Russia Ivan Sozonov Indonesia Rian Agung Saputro Scotland Kirsty Gilmour Malaysia Liew Daren South Korea Kim Sa-rang South Korea Kim Ha-na Hong Kong Tse Ying Suet
South Korea Ko Sung-hyun Malaysia Chan Peng Soon Russia Vladimir Ivanov South Korea Lee Dong-keun South Korea Lee Yong-dae Indonesia Hendra Setiawan
South Korea Shin Baek-cheol South Korea Eom Hye-won Thailand Bodin Isara Japan Kazumasa Sakai
United States Zhang Beiwen Thailand Tanongsak Saensomboonsuk Singapore Loh Kean Yew
Vietnam Vũ Thị Trang

Template:Divhide

Broadcast rights[edit]

In 2013 STAR Sports India purchased the broadcasting rights for India.[15]

Winning bidder Regional broadcast rights Terms of deal
STAR Sports  India 2013-2025
Fox Sports Template:HKG 2013-2020
SKY Sports  United Kingdom 2013-2030
ESPN  United States 2013-2023
Hotstar Worldwide digital rights 2016–present[16]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. "Rules And Regulations". Premier Badminton League. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  2. PBL to have Trump Match, best of three games for 15 points - The Times of India / Press Trust of India, 15 December 2015
  3. Antony, A. Joseph (12 August 2013). "Sudirman Cup-like format for IBL". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  4. Sachetat, Raphaël. "When private leagues help make a living". Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Sportstar, Team. "PBL Auction- As it happened: PV Sindhu, Tai Tzu fetch big bucks, Chennai, Pune build strong teams". Sportstar. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "7 Teams, 154 Shuttlers: All You Need to Know About PBL Auction". The Quint. 26 November 2019. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Sportstar, Team. "PBL 5 Auction: Full team list, released and sold players". Sportstar. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  8. "After Saina Nehwal, Kidambi Srikanth pulls out of PBL to focus on international events". India Today. Press Trust of India. 25 November 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  9. Richard, Dominic. "PBL 5 preview: League aims to make splash despite several stars missing". Sportstar. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  10. 10.0 10.1 India, P. B. L. (20 January 2020). "Done deal! @gabbyadcock @7acespune Kuhoo Garg @Mumbai_Rockets_ Jessica Pugh @Superstarz_PBL Which team has made the best trade ahead of #PBLSeason5? #RiseOfTheRacquetpic.twitter.com/SYQbqTJmBh". @PBLIndiaLive. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  11. 11.0 11.1 "Home". Premier Badminton League. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  12. Indian Badminton League Teams Archived 26 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  13. "PBL 2020: Reigning world champion PV Sindhu, World No 2 Tai Tzu Ying to headline fifth edition of Premier Badminton League". Firstpost. Retrieved 21 January 2020.
  14. "Home". Premier Badminton League. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  15. "Indian Badminton League: Dabur nets Pune, PVP bags Hyderabad franchise". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 24 June 2013.
  16. Malvania, Urvi (2 January 2016). "Star Sports title sponsor of Premier Badminton League". Business Standard India. Retrieved 25 January 2020.