Sports
After Virat Kohli’s exit, One8 Commune Bengaluru shuts down
Outlet near Chinnaswamy closes amid rent row, compliance issues mount
BENGALURU: The One8 Commune outlet near M. Chinnaswamy Stadium has shut down following a court order, bringing a turbulent chapter for the high-profile dining destination to a close.
The immediate trigger was a legal dispute over unpaid dues. The outlet, operated by Trio Hills Hospitality, had reportedly defaulted on rent payments for nearly six months. Including maintenance charges and revenue share commitments, the outstanding amount is said to have crossed Rs 2 crore. A Bengaluru civil court subsequently directed the closure of the premises until all financial obligations are cleared.
The shutdown comes months after Virat Kohli, whose brand name lent the outlet its identity, had already distanced himself from the Bengaluru franchise. According to reports, concerns around repeated compliance-related issues prompted his team to withdraw the association. The removal of the One8 branding is believed to have impacted footfall, further straining the business.
The outlet had also faced regulatory scrutiny over the years. In 2024, authorities booked the establishment for operating beyond the 1:00 am curfew. The Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike had issued notices over missing fire safety clearances, while an FIR was filed for violating tobacco regulations by not providing a designated smoking zone under applicable laws.
In response to the closure, the brand maintained that the issue stemmed from building-level compliance responsibilities linked to the property owner rather than operational lapses on its part. It also denied that financial default was the primary reason, reiterating that customer safety remained a priority.
For now, the shutters remain down. While a reopening is theoretically possible if disputes are resolved, the absence of Kohli’s brand association makes a return under the One8 banner increasingly unlikely.
Sports
FIFA reopens World Cup ticket sales with 50 days to go
Five million tickets gone, a final window open — and prices still under fire
Fifty days. That is all that stands between football fans and the opening whistle of the 2026 World Cup. FIFA threw open its last-minute ticket window on Wednesday for all 104 matches, a final scramble on a first-come, first-served basis for whoever can get there fastest and pay up.
The numbers are staggering. More than five million of the roughly six million available tickets have already been sold, leaving a thin sliver for latecomers now flooding the queue. The tournament kicks off on June 11, sprawling across stadiums in the United States, Mexico and Canada, before the final curtain falls on Sunday, July 19.
FIFA was careful about what it put on offer. Tickets span categories 1 to 3 as well as front-row seat categories, depending on the match. “Along with this set of tickets, additional tickets will continue to be released to the public on an ongoing basis up until the final on Sunday, 19 July, subject to availability,” the governing body said. In plain English: keep refreshing.
The sale has not been without bruising. A chorus of American lawmakers bellowed at FIFA last month to bring prices down, accusing it of making the tournament a preserve of the wealthy through dynamic pricing. FIFA pushed back hard. It insists it uses variable pricing, where costs shift with demand and availability rather than adjusting automatically, as dynamic pricing does. The distinction may feel theological to a fan staring at a four-figure ticket price, but FIFA is sticking to it.
In a nod to affordability, FIFA rolled out a $60 “Supporter Entry Tier” in December, aimed at fans of qualified nations. Modest as the gesture was, those budget seats account for just 10 per cent of allocations for Participating Member Associations. For most fans, the arithmetic remains brutal.
The clock is ticking. The seats are thinning. And FIFA, true to form, will keep releasing tickets right up to the moment the referee blows for the final whistle, at whatever price the market will bear.








