2026 BBL season opener appears set to take place in India

Chennai's M. A. Chidambaram Stadium.
Chennai's M. A. Chidambaram Stadium. PANKAJ NANGIA / GETTY IMAGES VIA AFP

The iconic 38,000-capacity M. A. Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai is likely to host the opening game of the 2026/27 Big Bash League (BBL) season after the BCCI reportedly green-lighted the experiment overnight.

A five-man party of Cricket Australia (CA) representatives spent the weekend in Chennai to discuss the innovation, which first emerged earlier this year as part of CA's plans to attract significant Indian investment and interest in the competition. 

The executives reportedly attended Chennai Super Kings' Monday night loss to Sunrisers Hyderabad and secured an agreement from the Board of Cricket Control in India (BCCI) to stage a one-off match in the second week of December, which will likely involve reigning champions Perth Scorchers after they expressed their positive interest in the idea. 

CA have made no wishes to hide their desire to bring lucrative Indian capital into the BBL to restore it as the world's second-most premier franchise T20 competition, recently entering into a tentative showdown with state associations who had mixed opinions of whether to privatise their teams.

CEO Todd Greenberg conceded last week that he "should have done a better job" selling the proposal to state governing bodies, with two states (New South Wales and Queensland) formally rejecting the approach and South Australia expressing reservations. 

Victoria, Tasmania and Western Australia all voted in favour of privatisation and CA have begun consideration of whether to go ahead and seek buyers for the four BBL sides representing the three states who voted yes. 

With Western Australia all onboard, it would make sense that the Perth Scorchers would be willing to sell a home game to CA to be staged in Chennai, especially with Perth being the geographically closest capital city to India. 

A Perth to Chennai journey takes about ten to 11 hours with one stopover, whilst the two-leg journey from Sydney to Chennai via Singapore or Kuala Lumpur is a typical 14 to 15 hours including stopover.

Melbourne Renegades have also reportedly expressed interest in a Chennai home game as they explore a move away from Marvel Stadium. 

Selling their first home game to Chennai would mean they have just four to spread across secondary home Geelong as well as the MCG and Junction Oval, the latter of which recently had broadcast-standard floodlights erected.

A formal announcement of the arrangement is not expected until after a multilateral board meeting including the ICC at the end of May. 

Another issue to be ironed out is the potential participation of Pakistani players in the Chennai match, with their visas unlikely to be approved by the Indian government. 

Hassan Ali (Adelaide Strikers), Shaheen Shah Afridi and Zaman Khan (Brisbane Heat), Hassan Khan and Muhammad Rizwan (Melbourne Renegades), Haris Rauf (Melbourne Stars), Babar Azam (Sydney Sixers) and Shadab Khan (Sydney Thunder) all played in the 2025-26 BBL on single-season contracts. 

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