On a misty, chilly day in India-held Kashmir in the 1990s, left homebound due to the snow, a young girl stitched several layers of socks into a ball, which she used for playing cricket in a 10 by 10 feet room. Most children in the area, great innovators of their time, preferred the sock ball over the tennis ball, which later became popular as a cheap alternative to the leather ball.
Playing indoors was fine but then in the streets of downtown Srinagar, some girls joined the boys’ teams. Word of this spread like wild fire throughout the valley.
Women’s cricket was introduced in schools and colleges in Jammu and Kashmir back in the 1980s. Many thought of it as awkward or ridiculous but accepted it as it was after all being played within the four walls. But by the ’90s it had spread in the entire occupied Kashmir region, when inter-school and college teams were shaped up in different districts including Anantnag, Srinagar and Baramulla. Earlier, women’s cricket was supported and operated under the Women’s Cricket Association of J&K.
Abdul Hameed, a veteran football coach, organised the Women’s Cricket Championship in 2001. It was considered a mega event at the district level and J&K Bank had luckily sponsored it, too. Meanwhile, junior and senior inter-school, inter-college and inter-district tournaments were being organised regularly. The funds for women’s teams were released at the All India level by the Women’s Cricket Association. With the passing of time, women’s cricket was added as a feature to Jammu and Kashmir Cricket Association (JKCA) in 2005, when Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) extended its overwhelming support for it. The grounds were occupied by women bowlers and batters donning different coloured jerseys, despite the lack of support from the society at large.
A spirited female cricket coach in India-held Kashimir looks back at her days of playing cricket in the backyard of her house, at school and college and on streets and busy roads. The love for the game keeps her going
“The girls were eager to participate in competitions. When I was the sports officer at Kothibagh during my tenure in 2001-2005, Kounsar Ali had represented India in Nepal,” recounts Mohammad Amin Shah, a member of the Jammu and Kashmir State Sports Council.
Still, women’s cricket at the domestic level there did not see any kind of positive rise as the game after all was and is dominated mostly by male folks. Cricket was considered a societal taboo for girls in the past but things are changing now and women players are making a name after availing chances in schools and colleges, after years of being overshadowed by the men.
One among them is a bubbly 30-year-old promising all-rounder Sakeena Akther, a resident of Munawarabad. The valley’s first female cricket coach and who worked as a cricket selector in Jammu and Kashmir Cricket Association for at least two years for the transformation of the game among women. Sakeena achieved this feat when she joined Kashmir University in 2007, as a contractual.
Later, her job was confirmed as the permanent cricket coach after proving her mettle during the coaching stint when Mirza Noor-ud-Din Memorial Cup was in progress. The tournament is held every year at Kashmir University ground — the only turf wicket after Sher-i-Kashmir Stadium this region fortunately has. She had also facilitated the coaching camp of the U-22 boys’ team, who praised her efforts and commitment during the 15-day camp.
Now, Sakeena who liked bouncers had a smooth run; her run up was not much more than 12 paces but it was the sprint that generated her pace of over 115 km/h consistently while getting the ball at the right length to play some chin music with the batspersons.
Sakeena may not be a batting prodigy like Mithali Raj of India and she may not have a run-up like Sana Mir of Pakistan but her unique run-up and style of batting had it all. During her playing days she ruled the ground in her own way.
Playing indoors was fine but then in the streets of downtown Srinagar, some girls joined the boys’ teams. Word of this spread like wild fire ... Cricket was considered a societal taboo for girls in the past but things are changing now.