The fastest bowler in the women’s team
But the overtraining resulted in Maham getting injured. Still, the back fractures weren’t the only hurdles she had to overcome. Societal norms kicked in. Her relatives stopped speaking to her and were on the verge of boycotting her family if she continued playing cricket. “You know the relatives who come from nowhere. They have no concern, but they have to interfere in your business. That happened with me.”
But then her father stepped up and fought for her. Initially, her immediate family also wanted her to pursue education instead of cricket. “My father is very chill. And, I am very close to him. All of the relatives used to question him about my future. My family would tell me to think about becoming a doctor.”
“She had it in her to make it to the top,” says Tariq Rafiq, Maham’s father. “So, I did not care what anyone said. Our relatives told me cricket was just a waste of time and that she should become a doctor or engineer instead. But I knew she had talent. I used to take her to the grounds for practice. She had such great stamina that one day her coach told me that she won’t get tired if I tie her to the back of a car and make her run all over the city.”
Soon, Maham started grabbing the attention of the media. “When I started getting media coverage all the problems that my family had with me simply vanished. Before that they wouldn’t even speak to me, now they used to introduce me to everyone,” she says.
Maham, who will turn 21 on July 5, had set several goals for herself and one of them was to make it to the national side before turning 17. And, she achieved this just in time. “I was the highest wicket-taker at a national camp held at an Army facility in Abbottabad in 2014 and I was named for [the squad to play in] Australia. I was not expecting my name to come up in the squad. I only wanted to play cricket. I remember, it was afternoon in Abbottabad and all the girls started to come to me to wish me during my one-on-one session with our coach. I thought they were just doing it for fun. Then, our captain Sana [Mir] baaji came and congratulated me and told me that I had made it to the national side. I still couldn’t believe it.
“When I got my kit at the NCA, I locked my room and jumped up and down for five minutes in excitement. Until I played for Pakistan, I never wore any Pakistani cap or kit. My father had brought many of them for me, but I was adamant that I will wear a Pakistani cap and kit only after I achieve it. It was a surreal feeling when I got my blazer. I just cannot articulate that feeling. I just couldn’t believe that it had happened.
“I had set a target for myself that I have to be in the Pakistani side before the age of 17. And, on the first day of my camp with the Pakistani team I turned 17.”
Now, Maham has set a daunting goal for herself. For that she trains for almost eight to 10 hours a day. “There are a lot of plans but my ultimate goal is to be the fastest bowler in the world. I am working hard. But it also depends on how much international exposure I get. My aim is to perform at levels that are higher than the set benchmarks in our side.”
Just the thought that one day such a prestigious title might be attached to her name brings back that wide smile on her face.
The writer, a freelance journalist, has written for Dawn, Cricbuzz, Wisden Pakistan and India, First Post, and Cricingif. He tweets @ahsannagi
Published in Dawn, EOS, April 22nd, 2018