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HomeCricketHow Did Joy Bhattacharjya Become Joy Da?

How Did Joy Bhattacharjya Become Joy Da?

Mathematician. Quizzer. History buff. Computer Scientist. CEO. Director. Storyteller. Writer. Public Speaker. Sports Administrator. Tanks of World War II. Cricket, football, volleyball. What connects all these seemingly unrelated worlds? 

Just one individual: Joy Bhattacharjya. 

When I first started watching Cricbuzz Live seven years ago, Joy immediately caught my attention. I already knew Harsha Bhogle, the voice of Indian cricket, and Gaurav Kapur from his early IPL shows and Breakfast with Champions

Joy was a new face to me. And yet, I found myself waiting for his segments— the anecdotes, insights, and of course, the Joy Factor questions.

As a mathematician trying to find my voice in cricket writing myself, I find Joy’s story inspiring. I wanted to understand how he made the leap and bridged connections between his different interests. Without further ado, let’s explore Joy’s journey together.

Consider this a spiritual sequel to “How Did Harsha Bhogle Become Harsha Bhogle?” 

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Books Spark Curiosity: The Foundation Years  

To understand how Joy became such a compelling storyteller, we have to look no further than his own home. 

He grew up in a household where curiosity was the way of life. Both his parents were voracious readers. His sisters would go on to become educators, and his brother-in-law was a Rhodes Scholar. It was his father, an Army officer in the Corps of Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, whose stories left the deepest impression, from accounts of the 1946 Calcutta riots to the memories of the 1965 war. 

Surrounded by books, Joy found his spark in Children’s Britannica, and local contests during Saraswati and Durga Puja celebrations gave him his first taste of quizzing. 

He believes that success is a “function of the number of books that you read,” where each book or idea is capable of pushing you “into a hundred rabbit holes.”

Before sports, stats, or television, there was just a boy who had an endless hunger to learn. 

The Formative College Years and the Beginning of Quizzing

Joy studied mathematics during his undergraduate years at Jadavpur University in Kolkata, followed by a year of MSc, and a Master’s in Computer Applications. 

In his Tedx Talk, he recalls a literal bridge on campus with humanities and pure sciences on one side, and engineering on the other. That bridge would become a metaphor for his career: connecting numbers with narrative, creativity with logic. 

It was during college that Joy took quizzing to a national level, appearing on Quiz Time in 1988, India’s first inter-collegiate quiz show.

In the 1990s, he transitioned into a career in media. He worked as a producer across television, served as Head of Content for the quiz show, Mastermind India, and eventually became the Head of Production at ESPN Star Sports. There, he helped launch Super Selector in 2001, a precursor to Dream XI and India’s fantasy league boom. 

Since then, he has worked with National Geographic and the History Channel, hosted the CricIQ on ESPNCricinfo, and continues to write a quiz column for the Times of India.

From Super Selector to Team Director of KKR

The IPL changed the careers of many—Brendon McCullum, Lalit Modi, and yes, Joy Bhattacharjya. In 2008, Joy became the Project Director of Kolkata Knight Riders.

His experience designing Super Selector, a game that let fans build custom teams from live international matches helped him pitch a similar, data-driven strategy to IPL teams for the inaugural auction. In the end, it was KKR that brought him on board. Think of it like cricket’s early Moneyball moment. 

Because the IPL was still new, Joy had the freedom to define his role: Auction strategy, logistics, marketing, operations, essentially everything behind the scenes that helped the team succeed. 

And boy, did they succeed. After a shaky, multi-captain start, KKR lifted the trophy in 2012 & 2014, a clear high point in Joy’s career.

These days, Joy often reflects on this chapter fondly during Cricbuzz Live, from the aura of Jacques Kallis and the bond between Balaji and Gambhir, to the unlikely friendship of Ricky Ponting and Laxmi Ratan Shukla, and the star power of Shah Rukh Khan and Ganguly. 

At Cricbuzz, Joy brings in his love for stats to history as you can see from this story of C.K. Nayudu and Fazal Mahmood’s friendship during the Partition.

What I enjoy the most is the banter, dry humor, the movie references, and the pure conversation between Joy, Harsha, and Gaurav. Cricket talk at its finest.

Building Indian Sports: FIFA U-17 and Prime Volleyball League

As the IPL mature, Joy Bhattacharjya’s skills were called upon elsewhere. 

India was gearing up to host the FIFA U-17 World Cup, and Joy was appointed as the Project Director. Organizing a global tournament across six cities, adhering to FIFA’s detailed operations manual, even relocating matches out of Guhawati due to rain forecast, all while delivering the most attended U-17 World Cup in history with over 1.3 million spectators, was no small feat. 

Since then, he has shifted focus to volleyball, becoming the CEO of Prime Volleyball League (formerly, the Professional Volleyball League). Under his leadership, the league has gained momentum, expanded at the college level, and invested in grassroots development. 

Even before the IPL, Joy was involved in organizing Premier Hockey League (PHL). As his LinkedIn profile states, he is “passionate about building sport, not just cricket, in India.” In his own words, “Every federation of every sport want India.” Now, the onus is on India to become a welcoming sporting nation. 

His recent podcasts like Market and Sports are particularly fascinating on the impact of the IPL and India’s bid for the 2036 Olympics. 

But wait, there is more. 

He has also an author having co-written Do Different: The Untold Dhoni and The Great Indian Cricket Circus. Off-camera, Joy continues to surprise. He has taken up functional resistance training and he even got a tattoo! 

True to form, he keeps pushing boundaries, both in sport and in life. 

Also Read: How Much Wealth Does it Take to Win? Cricket, Olympics, and the Economics of Sport Dominance

Also Read: Cricket Life Lessons and Tributes

What I Learned from Joy Bhattacharjya 

In 1984, the late mathematician Vaughan Jones discovered the Jones Polynomial, a breakthrough that bridged knot theory and statistical mechanics. He later received the Fields Medal, mathematics’ highest honor, and his work continues to influence quantum physics and molecular biology.

In a similar vein, Joy followed a range of interests and connected them, one by one. Three decades later, we can reflect on the enormity of what he’s built and the far-reaching impact he continues to have. He explored, he connected, he built bridges.

Joy has taught me the value of staying open-minded by welcoming new ideas, exploring unfamiliar disciplines, and committing to a life of learning. And doing it all without ever sacrificing humor, curiosity, or ‘joy.’

In Bengali, ‘Da’ means elderly brother. 

Over time, Joy Bhattacharjya became more than a name on a panel or the host of quiz show. He became Joy Da, an elder brother to India’s sporting fraternity, a figure of warmth, wisdom, and enduring curiosity. 

I will leave you with this question: 

Would you rather be a jack of all trades, master of one, or all of the above like Joy? 

****

Thank you for reading. Appreciate it! 

Other Videos/Podcasts from Joy:

Here’s some of my work in other fields if you are interested:

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