Mark Mascarenhas was a big man.
He stood at six-feet two, had broad shoulders, a booming voice, and a laugh that could fill a stadium. It certainly filled his suite at The Oberoi, Mumbai, where he lived each time he jetted into the city from his base in Connecticut.
In time, he set up an office in Worli, but his hotel suite continued to serve as an outpost at Nariman Point and meetings—not to mention food and drinks—flowed into the wee hours. Broadcasters, BCCI mandarins, business enchiladas, they all wanted in on the action at WorldTel: The 10-man David-sized operation that Mark ran like a Goliath.
He cut big deals, wrote big cheques, and wasn’t shy of picking big fights. He took on state broadcasters, cricket boards and corporate heavies with the same impunity with which a Sachin Tendulkar would swat away a Glenn McGrath express delivery.
And that brings us to one of the sweet ironies of Mark’s life. Mr Big’s most defining move was signing on a boyish cricketer who was fondly called ‘the little master’. Maybe it’s because opposites truly attract. Or, more likely, Mark knew he was onto the biggest story in international cricket.
At a time when Sachin’s biggest advertising deal was about Rs 16 lakh a year, Mark signed him up for a five-year contract valued at nearly Rs 25 crore. Sachin was already one of the richest cricketers, but with the WorldTel contract, he hit the ball out of the park. It quickly became the talk of the town: Was it for real? Leave alone turn a profit, would Mark even recover his money? Would he see the contract through or was it just badge value?
While the deal created headlines, Mark busied himself creating a market. He had raised the bar, revised the benchmarks, changed the game, and we were running out of clichés. Meanwhile, there was an important change in Sachin’s on-field game as well. He started to open the batting in one day internationals and did so at his brutal and dominating best. With the entire innings at his disposal, the building blocks were in place for what would eventually add up to a hundred hundreds.
An impressive roster of brands signed on with WorldTel: Adidas, MRF, Philips, Visa to name just a few. Each coughed up in excess of Rs 1 crore for an annual contract. Even old faithfuls like Boost and Pepsi escalated their contracts in line with the new numbers. Mark’s big bet had paid off.
Know Risk Know Reward
Suddenly, everyone wanted to know who Mark Mascarenhas was and where he’d come from. He was an outsider in every way. He grew up in Bangalore and moved to the US.
He worked his way up at CBS and was their top sales guy. (One of the many legends surrounding Mark is that he landed his CBS job by telling his boss he wanted the job as he badly wanted to buy a big car. He got the job and, sooner than later, he got the car.) He went after what he wanted and often got it.
It was only a matter of time before he struck out on his own and used his many CBS bonuses (net of the new car) to start acquiring and trading rights. He couldn’t go for the big ticket items, but did some arbitrage deals in soccer and boxing before scoring a multi-bagger with the Skiing World Cup rights.
Around 1992-93, he heard of the upcoming BCCI bid for broadcast rights of the 1996 cricket World Cup. TWI, a major player in sports production, was already at the table; while they could come up with the money, there was a roadblock in the payment terms. BCCI needed some cash flow upfront and that was the deal-breaker.
It was just the kind of situation Mark revelled in. He upped the numbers, made a down payment (the figures were $10 million and $3 million, respectively), and swiped the deal from under TWI’s nose. Mark doubled his money, earning over $20 million from the 1996 World Cup. He promptly invested in rights across Sharjah, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
The Ones That Got Away
Actually, he did one better. Once the first contract ended, Mark renewed his contract with Sachin for a whopping Rs 100 crore. Ten years earlier, Mark had paid around Rs 50 crore for the rights to the cricket World Cup. Now, he was pinning twice the amount on just one player, even if he was, arguably, the greatest of them all.
(This story appears in the 27 December, 2013 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)
nice post
on Oct 14, 2014Good article....good job done!
on Oct 9, 2014Amazing article...restores faith in the art of investigative journalism...
on Dec 27, 2013