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The Making of a Legacy: India’s 1978 Women’s Cricket World Cup
#Part3 of Behind the Stats 27.02.2026 In the freezing dawn of January 1978, a handful of young Indian women stepped off a rattling train onto the platform of Eden Gardens in Calcutta. They clutched battered kit bags and geometry textbooks alike. Some were barely out of high school, others held bank clerk jobs, but all were charged with an impossible task: represent India at its first-ever Women’s Cricket World Cup. For Diana Edulji – a 22-year-old clerk with Western Railways
The Cricket Keeper
Feb 277 min read


Sisters of Courage: How Shaiza and Sharmeen Khan Willed Pakistan Women’s Cricket Into Existence
19.09.2025 #Part 2 of Behind the Stats First, imagine a national game played in near silence. Karachi. The night before a women’s match, police stand outside two sisters’ home. Morning comes and the stadium is ringed with thousands of officers. Spectators aren’t allowed in. The players walk out anyway. They play anyway. When the last ball is bowled, the sisters board a plane and leave the country for their own safety. It almost sounds like fiction. It wasn’t. The spark at Lo
The Cricket Keeper
Sep 19, 20255 min read


Potatoes, Perseverance, and a Trophy: The First Women’s World Cup
This one’s for my potato-loving friends. #Part1 of Behind the Stats 03.07.2025 In my time, I’ve met plenty of people who love a good potato-related story. Some say if Taylor Swift ran for president, she’d win in a landslide. Others reckon Beyoncé could sweep every state. But honestly? I think there are enough people out there who might actually vote for a potato to rule the so-called “land of the free.” So what does all this have to do with women’s cricket? Well, back in 197
The Cricket Keeper
Jul 3, 202510 min read
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