MUMBAI: The Lanka Premier League (LPL) has introduced a social media-based eligibility rule ahead of its 2026 season, formally linking digital popularity with player categorisation in one of franchise cricket’s most unusual commercial pivots yet. According to a report by Sri Lanka’s Newswire, players hoping to qualify for the league’s top-tier Icon category must now bring more than just cricketing pedigree to the table. Alongside at least 75 T20 internationals, over 100 franchise T20 matches and a minimum of 30 appearances in the last 18 months, players must also have more than 250,000 followers across social media platforms.
The same follower threshold of over 250,000 applies to the Star category as well. Cricket-wise, players must have featured in at least 50 T20 internationals, played more than 100 franchise T20 matches and completed at least 30 matches over the past 18 months.
Players selected under the Icon and Star brackets are expected to receive salaries ranging between $60,000 and $80,000.
The Gold category lowers the digital entry barrier slightly, requiring players to have over 150,000 followers on social media. On-field requirements include a minimum of 30 T20 internationals, more than 75 franchise T20 appearances and at least 20 matches in the past 18 months.
Meanwhile, the Classic category skips a hard follower-count benchmark altogether but still demands what the guidelines describe as a “reasonable fan base and commercial appeal”, alongside at least 20 T20 internationals, over 50 franchise T20 matches and 20 recent appearances.
The move marks one of the rare occasions where social media influence has been officially woven into player eligibility rules in professional cricket, a sign of how deeply franchise sport is merging entertainment economics with athletic performance.
Ironically, the league’s own social footprint remains comparatively modest. At the time of writing, the LPL’s official accounts reportedly had around 38,200 followers on X and roughly 99,200 followers on Instagram.
The decision is likely to reignite conversations around whether modern franchise leagues are increasingly scouting not just batting averages and strike rates, but also engagement rates, reels and personal branding power.
The sixth edition of the Lanka Premier League is scheduled to be held between July and August 2026 across four venues SSC and RPICS in Colombo, PICS in Pallekele, and RDICS in Dambulla. The tournament will be organised by Sri Lanka Cricket in partnership with The IPG Group.