advertisement
Harmanpreet Kaur and Smriti Mandhana want Ramesh Powar to continue as coach despite the controversy that has rocked Indian women’s cricket.
Committee of Administrators (COA) chairman Vinod Rai told PTI that Kaur and Mandhana – India’s T20I captain and vice-captain – have backed Powar to continue as coach till 2021. Powar's interim tenure ended on 30 November and the BCCI has already invited fresh applications for the job. Powar is free to re-apply.
"Yes, they have written a letter stating that they want Ramesh Powar to continue," Rai said.
Though Harmanpreet and Smriti are for Powar's extension, it is learnt that Ekta Bisht and Mansi Joshi are against his reinstatement along with ODI captain Mithali.
Both Harmanpreet and Smriti have underlined Powar’s instrumental role, in their opinion, in transforming the team and their performances. Kaur backed her defense of the seemingly-outgoing coach by stating Powar’s involvement was imperative with the next edition of the T20 World Cup only 15 months away.
Mandhana went on to attribute India’s rapidly-improving display on the field to Powar, reportedly stating that he “changed the intent of the players and gave everyone confidence”.
Matters have worsened post the team’s return to India from the West Indies, with an e-mail from Raj to BCCI bosses citing her feeling of being “humiliated” by Powar being leaked to the media. Powar himself has revealed how the Indian ODI captain “threatened to retire” during the ill-fated WT20 campaign.
Kaur and the Indian team management’s decision to bench veteran batter Raj for the WT20 semis in November, which India went on to lose to England, was widely criticised among the Indian cricket fraternity. But the skipper appears to have backed the move, and almost as if to exonerate Powar, suggested the decision wasn’t his alone.
Kaur’s opinion, if true, was mirrored by vice-captain Mandhana. “All the meetings that were held with respect to the playing XI for all the matches came to a unanimous decision which was taken by captain, vice-captain, coach and selector in the presence of our team manager (Trupti Bhattacharya),” Mandhana was quoted as saying by a Hindustan Times report.
Mandhana was insistent upon an amicable resolution being found to the saga for the better of Indian cricket.
Kaur, too, has reportedly expressed that the furore engulfing the Women in Blue has been “disheartening”.
“Our defeat in the semi-finals was very disheartening and it brings us all to feel more miserable to see how the controversies has stained our image and questioned the entire cricket fraternity,” she is quoted to have said.
(With inputs from PTI)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)