Bengaluru dropped as Women’s World Cup venue after RCB parade tragedy

Women’s World Cup opener and final moved out months after Chinnaswamy Stadium tragedy

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Fans throng outside the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru on June 4, 2025, to celebrate a day after Royal Challengers Bengaluru's victory in the Indian Premier League (IPL) Twenty20 final.
Fans throng outside the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru on June 4, 2025, to celebrate a day after Royal Challengers Bengaluru's victory in the Indian Premier League (IPL) Twenty20 final.
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Dubai: Bengaluru’s cricket faithful may be paying the price for the euphoric but tragic celebrations that followed Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s maiden IPL title in June. The city, which was due to host the opening match and possibly the final of the Women’s World Cup, has been dropped from the list of venues just weeks before the tournament.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) confirmed on Friday that Mumbai will now replace Bengaluru as one of the four Indian host cities for the 50-over event beginning September 30. Sri Lanka, the tournament’s co-host, will stage matches in Colombo, while Guwahati has stepped in to stage the high-profile curtain-raiser between India and Sri Lanka.

Unsafe to handle large crowds

The ICC cited only “unforeseen circumstances” for moving games away from the iconic M. Chinnaswamy Stadium. But local media reports indicate that the Karnataka police had refused to grant clearance for major matches at the venue. A judicial commission had earlier deemed the stadium “unsafe” to handle large crowds following the stampede-like chaos on June 4 that left 11 people dead and over 50 injured during the RCB victory parade.

That tragedy, which saw fans as young as 14 crushed to death as thousands swarmed the stadium gates, shocked Indian cricket and sparked nationwide outrage. For many, the removal of Bengaluru from the World Cup roster now appears a direct consequence of that fateful day.

Originally, the city was slated to host up to five matches, including the November 2 final — depending on whether Pakistan reached the title decider. With the change, the final will instead be held either in Mumbai or Colombo. Pakistan, meanwhile, will play all their games in Colombo under a compromise arrangement between the Asian Cricket Council and the ICC.

For Bengaluru, the loss of hosting rights is not just a sporting blow but also an economic and reputational setback. The Chinnaswamy Stadium has long been a favourite for international fixtures, renowned for its atmosphere and passionate following. Being sidelined from a marquee ICC event underscores how the June tragedy has altered perceptions of the venue’s readiness to stage global tournaments.

Countdown begins

While the ICC has avoided directly linking its decision to the RCB celebrations, the optics are difficult to ignore. The Women’s World Cup was seen as an opportunity to showcase India’s growing interest in women’s cricket, with Bengaluru expected to play a central role. Instead, the city has been relegated to the sidelines, a reminder of how fan safety lapses can have long-lasting repercussions.

With the countdown to the tournament underway, attention now turns to how smoothly the relocated fixtures will be managed. For Bengaluru, the real issue is not just missing out on a few games, but how the setback reshapes its role in India’s cricket calendar.

— With inputs from AFP

From playing on the pitch to analysing it from the press box, Satish has spent over three decades living and breathing sport. A cricketer-turned-journalist, he has covered three Cricket World Cups, the 2025 Champions Trophy, countless IPL seasons, F1 races, horse racing classics, and tennis in Dubai. Cricket is his home ground, but he sees himself as an all-rounder - breaking stories, building pages, going live on podcasts, and interviewing legends across every corner of the sporting world. Satish started on the back pages, and earned his way to the front, now leading the sports team at Gulf News, where he has spent 25 years navigating the fast-evolving game of journalism. Whether it’s a Super-Over thriller or a behind-the-scenes story, he aims to bring insight, energy, and a fan’s heart to every piece. Because like sport, journalism is about showing up, learning every day, and giving it everything.

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