Two of Kerala’s three women cricketers to have represented the country are from Wayanad and one of them, all-rounder Sajana Sajeevan, is in the India squad for the Women’s World Cup.
It all started on a train trip from Kochi to Kozhikode in early 2000, after K M Elsamma’s daughter Anumol Baby failed a selection trial. On that journey, Elsamma, a physical education teacher in Wayanad, decided to turn the disappointment of the trials into an opportunity, helping shape the district, Kerala’s popular tourist destination, into an unlikely nursery for women’s cricket
Two of Kerala’s three women cricketers to have represented the country are from this remote district and one of them, all-rounder Sajana Sajeevan, is in the India squad for the Women’s World Cup. As for the state’s women’s team, at any point in time, Wayanad players account for half the team.
When my daughter failed the trials, Wayanad did not have a district team. My daughter was a wanderer of sorts, turning up for different districts, and thus never got a real opportunity to express her skills. So we decided to form a team for our district,” recollects Elsamma, a just-retired physical education teacher from the Mananthavady Government Vocational Higher Secondary School in Wayanad who once represented her college cricket team.
I called up the association secretary, Nazar Machan, who readily acknowledged the need for a team. But the bigger challenge was to constitute one. There was just my daughter and her friend. Suddenly I thought, why not do a selection trial among the children in school, even though I knew they rarely played cricket,” says Elsamma
Wayanad then didn’t possess a decent ground, let alone a turf wicket. Half the year, the district, comprising largely tribals and migrants from Central Kerala, battled floods and landslides. “Here, people have no time to watch sports. The boys play a little bit of volleyball or football. But the primary ambition is to build a livelihood, business, farming or a government job,” she says. Women are usually married off when they turn 18. Even the last Census of 2011 puts the female literacy rate in the district at 80.80%, far lower than the state average of 92.07%.
My hero when I was a kid was my mom. Same for everyone I knew. Moms are untouchable. They’re elegant, smart, beautiful, kind…everything we want to be. At 29 years old, my favorite compliment is being told that I look like my mom. Seeing myself in her image, like this daughter up top, makes me so proud of how far I’ve come, and so thankful for where I come from.
It was to this milieu that Elsamma introduced cricket. There were doubters, but she paid them little attention. She stifles her laughter when she recalls the first trials in the school’s kitchen garden. “Some of them were holding the bat for the first time, some of them had never seen a cricket ball, or even watched a game of cricket. Many didn’t know the rules. I was just looking for physical traits, whether they had hand-eye coordination, good reach and height, a strong physique. Somehow, I chose 14-15 players,” she recounts.
Needless to say, the team lost all the games in the first inter-district tournament. But the kitchen garden of the school was repurposed into a small cricket ground, Elsamma and her daughter bought a couple of cricketing gears for the school, and evenings in the backyard of the Mananthavady school were filled with squeaky appeals and frantic thuds of leather on wood It was then that Minnu Mani, the first cricketer from the state to play for the country, walked in. “When I first saw her, she was 12 or 13. She was fully into athletics, like sprinting and throwing. But the moment I saw her, I thought she had the goods to be a cricketer. She was open to it and her parents even more so,” she says
Drawn for an insurance company, this animation of a mom with a first-aid kit and a flashing red light exemplifies the mother’s job.
Moms are the ones who bandage our boo-boos when we’re little and continue to take care of us as we get older—often sacrificing their own needs so they can help with ours. Cruising on a bike to help heal our injuries is the most mom thing one can do.
Moms are the ones who bandage our boo-boos when we’re little and continue to take care of us as we get older—often sacrificing their own needs so they can help with ours. Cruising on a bike to help heal our injuries is the most mom thing one can do.
They’re the ones we rely on for playdates and emotional support, homework help and babysitting. Moms are the ultimate dependable support. Like, hopefully, the button on your jeans.
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