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PUBLISHED ON: 03 MAR 2026, 09:30 AM
The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 is currently hurtling toward its finale in India and Sri Lanka, yet a darkening geopolitical situation in the Middle East threatens to derail the momentum of the upcoming “Great Indian Summer.” With IPL 2026 scheduled to kick off on March 28, the BCCI and franchise stakeholders find themselves navigating a logistical quagmire: a full-blown airspace crisis that makes typical travel planning obsolete.
Traditional transit hubs—Dubai (DXB), Doha (DOH), and Abu Dhabi (AUH)—serve as the indispensable arteries for international cricket. Right now, those arteries are constricted. Escalating regional friction has forced a wave of flight diversions and sudden groundings that leave no room for error.
This isn’t just theoretical anxiety. We saw the blueprint for this mess only last week. When the Zimbabwe and West Indies squads were knocked out of the World Cup, they didn’t just fly home. They spent 72 hours effectively stranded in transit as no-fly zones expanded without warning.
A senior BCCI official, speaking to SLH on the condition of anonymity, put it bluntly: “The Zimbabwe delays were a localized hiccup; this is a systemic failure of the corridor. If the Gulf doesn’t stabilize by March 15, we might be looking at a staggered, ‘as-and-when’ arrival for our biggest international draws.”
The crisis extends far beyond the dugout. The IPL 2026 production machine relies on roughly 400 international technicians and tons of 4K hardware that usually travels via Qatar or the UAE.
No. The threat is strictly about getting to the venues, not the safety at the venues. There is zero appetite for a move to the UAE given the current regional instability.
The show will go on, but the lineups might look thin. Heavily reliant teams like RCB and CSK could find themselves forced to field domestic-heavy XIs if their marquee overseas stars are still stuck in transit.
The matches in India and Sri Lanka are insulated from the crisis. However, the ICC has already triggered a “Global Travel Taskforce” to ensure that the semifinalists can actually get home—or to their IPL camps—once the March 8 final concludes.
Significantly. The 8-team PSL begins on March 26 and shares the same travel dependencies. Both leagues are currently in a quiet, high-stakes bidding war for the few remaining private charter slots available through the Singapore route.
PUBLISHED ON: 03 MAR 2026, 09:30 AM

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