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Mithali Raj grabbed the country’s attention when she led the Indian women’s cricket team to their second World Cup final in July this year. The last time the team had reached the same stage was in 2005, when Raj was playing her first tournament as skipper.
The 35-year-old was made vice-captain of the women’s cricket team after just two international tours and offered captaincy at 21, after which she opted to be the skipper in 2005. But way before that, years of hard work and sacrifice, and a chance meeting with cricket shaped Mithali into the woman she is today.
A 9-year-old Mithali picked up the bat when she used to accompany her brother to his cricket coaching lessons at the St John’s Cricket Academy in Secunderabad.
However, her father – a retired airforce officer and cricket enthusiast – S Dorairaj told the Livemint that 5.30 am trips to the academy were just a way for him to get a “lazy” Mithali into a healthy routine.
Watching Mithali accompany her brother and father everyday, the academy’s coach Jyothi Prasad had then suggested that she too start playing the sport. The Hyderabad girl took to the game immediately and picked up the skills in no time, according to her father.
Sampath Kumar, Mithali’s coach at her Hyderabad school, too identified the cricketer’s talent and said that she would go on to play for India after coaching her for just three months.
Mithali Raj went to make a mark at the Under-16, Under-19 and senior state teams before making her international debut against Ireland in June 1999.
It’s a little-known fact that Mithali learnt Bharatanatyam for eight years before sacrificing it to take up cricket full time.
But that wasn’t the only sacrifice in Mithali’s journey to greatness. The cricketer’s father, who worked with Andhra Bank after retiring from the Air Force, turned down a promotion so that the Mithali could stay in Hyderabad and continue her training. Also, Raj’s immediate family decided to move out of their joint family home so that the cricketer wasn’t a victim of her grandparent’s orthodoxy. Her mother, Leela Raj, made a sacrifice too. She quit her job to focus on Mithali.
Though her parents have never travelled with her on an international tour, Raj’s family struggled to acquire basic equipment at a time when getting sponsorship was a struggle. In fact, her father spent around Rs 25,000 for her first tour to England.
But each one of these sacrifices and every day of hard work contributed to the making of Mithali Raj, who went to become the highest ODI scorer and the first to reach the 6000-mark in women’s cricket .
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