Sports team owners and billionaire businessmen are among the high-profile investors who have secured stakes in The Hundred ahead of the 2025 season.
The England and Wales Cricket Board announced last summer that it was opening a process to secure private investment ahead of the 2025 edition, which is live on Sky Sports in August.
The eight hosts of the teams were given a 51 per cent stake, which they could sell – in full or in part – or keep, while the remaining 49 per cent in each side were sold by the ECB, with the proceeds distributed between the 18 first-class counties and the MCC.
The running tally of valuations for the eight Hundred teams stands in the region of £950m, but who owns who?
Here’s a team-by-team look at who has invested into The Hundred ahead of the new season…
Birmingham Phoenix
Birmingham City owners Knighthead – for whom NFL legend Tom Brady acts as a minority investor – succeeded in a £40m deal for the Edgbaston-based Phoenix side.
Warwickshire CEO Stuart Cain said: “Throughout the process Knighthead demonstrated a strong financial commitment and deep understanding of what it takes to elevate high-performance sport.
“They have far-reaching global influence that will help us promote Birmingham Phoenix to cricket and sport fans around the world and a wealth of sports investment experience.
“We’d said at the start of this process that we wanted an investor committed to invest in the region and be with us for the long term, to make a real difference. I believe we’ve found that in Knighthead.”
London Spirit
An 11-strong consortium of tech billionaires has agreed to buy a 49 per cent stake in Spirit, who play at Lord’s.
Cricket Investor Holdings Limited, led by US cybersecurity company Palo Alto Networks chairman and chief executive Nikesh Arora, are set to pay £145m, which would value Spirit at around £300m.
Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Google, and Satya Nadella, the chief executive of Microsoft, are part of the consortium.
This bid is reported to have beaten off competition from Manchester United co-chair Avram Glazer’s Lancer Capital and a group affiliated to Chelsea chairman Todd Boehly.
Manchester Originals
The RPSG Group, owners of Indian Premier League side Lucknow Super Giants, were the successful bidders during the sale of Originals, who play their home games at Emirates Old Trafford.
Reports suggest the winning bid values the Originals at over £100m, with the RPSG Group outlasting other interested parties after initially being interested in securing Spirit.
A statement from Lancashire said: “We have been very focused on securing a great partner – ideally from the IPL
– and RPSG has been our preferred bidder for some time.
“We are delighted by the outcome and look forward to working together to create an exciting future. Together, we have a shared ambition to create a very special cricket team for the people of Manchester and the wider North West region.”
Northern Superchargers
Sunrisers Hyderabad’s Sun Group are another set of IPL owners to invest in The Hundred after buying Yorkshire’s entire stake in the Headingley-based Superchargers for around £100m.
Sunrisers Hyderabad are two-time IPL champions, in 2009 and 2016, while the Sun Group’s Sunrisers Eastern Cape franchise has won the first two editions of the SA20 in South Africa.
The huge financial windfall could allow Yorkshire to pay off their £15m debt to the Graves family in one go.
Oval Invincibles
Reliance Industries Limited, who own Mumbai Indians in the IPL, are said to have seen off competition from a consortium involving executives from Google, Microsoft and Adobe, as well private equity group CVC.
The price that the Ambani family – the richest family in India – agreed to pay for the ECB stake was unclear, although sources said it was understood to have valued 100 per cent of Invincibles at approximately £125m.
Southern Brave
Southern Brave are the second side to be fully owned by IPL-backed investment, with the GMR Group – as expected – winning the bid to secure the 49 per cent stake.
The Delhi Capitals co-owners were already majority shareholders in Hampshire, the first County Championship club to be owned by an overseas franchise.
It’s understood that the GMR Group have secured the remaining stake for just under £48m, valuing the team at around £98m.
Trent Rockets
After unsuccessfully bidding for Spirit, Chelsea co-owner Boehly purchased a 49 per cent stake in Rockets as his company Cain International, which he set up with British businessman Jonathan Goldstein, forked out close to £40m for the Midlands outfit.
The acquisition of Rockets adds to the American’s sporting portfolio with Boehly also co-owner of French football club Strasbourg, Major League Baseball’s Los Angeles Dodgers and the WNBA’s Los Angeles Sparks.
Welsh Fire
The owners of Major League Cricket franchise Washington Freedom, backed by Indian-American IT entrepreneur Sanjay Govil, agreed to buy a 49 per cent holding in Cardiff-based Fire for around £65m.
Freedom’s owners beat off interest from, among others, Capri International, which owns UP Warriorz in the Women’s Premier League.
Wrexham Football Club’s owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenny were among those interested in a stake but did not enter the formal bidding process.
Who will win The Hundred? Watch every match in 2025 live this August on Sky Sports. Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW.
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