Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Quick Info → Age: 39 Years | Current Channel: JioCinema | Grandfathers: Dushyant Kumar + Kamleshwar
| Bio/Wiki | |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Anant Tyagi |
| Profession | Sports Broadcaster, Commentator, Anchor, Emcee |
| Known For | IPL anchor; India cricket coverage; ISL host; Olympics presenter |
| Current Platform | JioCinema Sports |
| Twitter/X | @anantyagi_ |
| Physical Stats | |
| Height | in centimeters – 178 cm / in meters – 1.78 m / in feet inches – 5′ 10″ (approx.) |
| Eye Colour | Dark Brown |
| Hair Colour | Black |
| Personal Life | |
| Date of Birth | 23 November 1986 |
| Age (as of 2026) | 39 Years |
| Birthplace | New Delhi, India |
| Hometown | Mumbai, Maharashtra |
| Zodiac Sign | Sagittarius |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Religion | Hinduism |
| Marital Status | Married |
| Education | |
| School 1 | Early schooling — Delhi |
| School 2 | The Doon School, Dehradun (Boarding School, joined age 11) |
| College | Hindu College, Delhi University (BA Economics Honours) |
| Post-Grad | Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi (MA Mass Communication) |
| International | London School of Economics and Political Science (Digital Communication & Multimedia) |
| Family | |
| Father | Former Banker |
| Mother | Not publicly disclosed |
| Sister | Manjula Tyagi (younger) |
| Paternal Grandfather | Dushyant Kumar Tyagi (legendary Hindi poet, 1931–1975) |
| Maternal Grandfather | Kamleshwar (Padma Bhushan author, screenwriter, 1932–2007) |
| Wife | Sagarika Chettri (Sports Anchor, married 20 December 2015) |
| Career | |
| 2013 | ESPN Star Sports — Hindi commentator (debut, Barclays Premier League) |
| 2014 | Star Sports — ISL host (Hindi), then English shows |
| 2017 | Hotstar — IPL presenter |
| 2022–present | JioCinema Sports — India cricket, IPL, WPL, Olympics, FIFA World Cup |
| Net Worth | |
| Estimated Net Worth | ₹2–4 Crore (approx.) |
Born 23 November 1986 in New Delhi. Middle-class family from Bhopal — his father worked as a banker. At age 11, his parents sent him to The Doon School in Dehradun — one of India’s most prestigious boarding schools, known for producing heads of state, army generals, and industrialists. Being sent there at 11 means leaving home, leaving friends, and adjusting to an entirely different world. Not every kid handles that well. Anant clearly did.
At The Doon School he was Head Boy — a significant position in a school that takes leadership seriously. He also became one of only two students in the school’s 75-year history to win all three Blazer Awards simultaneously: the Scholar’s Blazer (academics and extracurricular), the Games Blazer (sports), and the Duke’s Blazer (community and character). Three blazers, both of them ever. That’s not a small thing.
During school he played field hockey, tennis, and athletics — and his actual dream was to become a professional tennis player. That didn’t happen. Broadcasting did instead.
This is the part of Anant Tyagi’s story that most people don’t know — and it genuinely changes how you look at him.
His paternal grandfather was Dushyant Kumar Tyagi (1 September 1931 – 30 December 1975) — widely considered the first Hindi ghazal writer in India and one of the greatest Hindi poets of the 20th century. Dushyant Kumar wrote Saaye Mein Dhoop, the collection that changed modern Hindi poetry. His lines have been used in films, political speeches, anti-corruption movements — Arvind Kejriwal quoted him during the 2011 India Against Corruption movement. He died at 44 from cardiac arrest in Bhopal. A museum dedicated to him exists in Bhopal. His ghazal lines — “Sirf hungaama khada karna mera maqsad nahin, saari koshish hai ki yeh soorat badalni chahiye” — are still quoted at literary events and on social media forty years after his death.
His maternal grandfather was Kamleshwar (6 January 1932 – 27 January 2007) — full name Kamleshwar Prasad Saxena — one of the most important Hindi writers of the 20th century. He wrote the landmark novel Kitne Pakistan (2000) and authored the screenplay of Gulzar’s film Aandhi. He received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 2003 and Padma Bhushan in 2005. He also worked as a TV anchor at Doordarshan and was editor of important literary magazines.
So Anant Tyagi grew up with a Hindi ghazal poet as one grandfather and a Padma Bhushan screenwriter as another. He has said in interviews that he read Dushyant Kumar’s work and grew up spending time with Kamleshwar directly. The literary household isn’t just a family fact — it is clearly where his feel for language came from.
Getting into broadcasting was an accident. He was studying at Hindu College and initially aimed for financial journalism because he was strong in economics. That didn’t feel right. A friend called him for lunch one day and casually asked him to audition for a Hindi commentator role at ESPN Star Sports. He went. He got selected — for commentary on the English Premier League.
He joined ESPN Star Sports in 2013 as a Hindi sports commentator. In 2014 he moved to Star Sports and hosted the Indian Super League in Hindi. He then shifted to English — first non-live shows, then live broadcasts. In 2017 he hosted IPL for Hotstar.
After working in London at Centrica (a gas company) as a Business Analyst briefly after his LSE course, he came back to sports media. The broadcasting path had become clear.
For the past two years he has been anchoring and commentating at JioCinema Sports — one of India’s biggest OTT sports platforms. His cricket coverage includes India matches, IPL, and WPL. He has also covered FIFA World Cup and Olympics. He anchors studio shows, does pitch-side reporting, and provides live commentary.
He has interviewed sports personalities including Nadia Comaneci and a long list of cricketers, footballers, and Olympians over the course of his career.
Anant married Sagarika Chettri on 20 December 2015. She is also a sports anchor — so both people in the marriage understand the unsocial hours, travel, and tournament schedules that come with the profession. That shared context isn’t nothing. No public details about children.
Anant Tyagi is not a cricketer — he is a cricket commentator and presenter. He has no domestic or international cricket career as a player. His cricket involvement is entirely on the broadcasting side — anchoring IPL, India match studio shows, and international tournaments.
Estimated ₹2–4 Crore as of 2025–26. Built over 12 years across ESPN Star Sports, Star Sports, Hotstar, and JioCinema. Senior sports broadcasting in India pays well — especially IPL and India cricket coverage. His LSE education and business analyst stint in London also broadened his professional base, though he ultimately stayed in media.