ESPNcricinfo has learned that the consortium, which is led by Arizona-based tech entrepreneur Kal Somani, also includes owners of two franchises in US-based NFL – Rob Walton (Denver Broncos) and Michael Hamp, son of Sheila Ford Hamp, who owns Detroit Lions. Somani, who migrated from India to the US, is already one of the existing investors in RR. He is understood to have joined forces with two others to stake complete ownership of RR, winners of the IPL’s inaugural edition in 2008.
In addition to RR in IPL, the Somani-led consortium will also have ownership of all of Royals’ branded teams: Paarl Royals in SA20, and Barbados Royals in the CPL.
The Hamps, along with Walton and Somani, are also part of the ownership group of Motor City Golf Club franchise in Detroit, which is set to join the indoor golf league TGL in 2027, owned by golf greats Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.
The reason the Somani-led consortium bid aggressively for RR is because the set of investors, all tech-savvy, believed in the growth potential of IPL allied with the fast growth of India as a global market. The Somani-led consortium is now engaged in exclusive negotiations with RR’s current owner Manoj Badale to seal the deal. This will be followed by the ratification by BCCI, with talks expected to be closed in next few weeks.
One of the eight original IPL franchises, RR was bought by UK-based Emerging Media, which is owned by Badale, for $67 million in 2008. Back then, one USD equalled INR 40, compared to INR 94 currently. So in rupee terms, the Somani-led consortium bid is 57 times that made in 2008.
Despite being the least-valued franchise in 2008, RR, led by the late Shane Warne, scripted a fairytale triumph in the inaugural edition of the IPL. Last IPL, RR finished ninth with four wins, but that has not had any impact on the valuation of the franchise, which has always been independent of the team’s performance.
That was on the back of him getting a host of individual investors on board in a funding drive which included Ian McKinnon (one of the founding partners of TEAM8, a leading sports and entertainment company, and the creator of the Laver Cup), former BT CEO Phil Jansen, FutureLearn and Network International Chairman Ron Kalifa, and Betfair founder Ed Wray, along with set of tech entrepreneurs including Somani, Simer Mayo and Mihir Patel.
Another big-name investor who came onboard in 2021 was RedBird Capital Partners, which has interests in the parent company of Liverpool and the Boston Red Sox, and has a 15% stake in RR. Another big-name investor, and part of the original ownership group, was Lachlan Murdoch, eldest son of media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, whose Blue Water Estate Ltd.
None of the parties involved, from RR to Somani to the other investors as well as IPL, was available for comment.
Nagraj Gollapudi is news editor at ESPNcricinfo








