The Hindu (Bangalore)

Jordan and Tendulkar used to make me stop and watch

The double internatio­nal from New Zealand, whose desire is to win a World Cup, says she couldn’t take her eye off the television when the two were in action; she is excited to see cricket’s inclusion in the 2028 Olympics and talks about the evolution of

- SUZIE BATES

So, it was my dream job when I started and not getting paid, and now it is my dream job and I get paid.

How did players like you make a living during those days when there was no money at all in cricket?

It was a totally different world. As a female athlete, you didn’t expect to make money. It was never an aspiration, and when I was young, from 18 to 24, I studied, and we got grants from the government to study and play sports to help pay for our living allowance.

I was really fortunate that I had a very supportive family, so I lived at home during those years. So, I wasn’t paying rent, and I could afford to train and study and not have to worry about getting a job on top of that. I took parttime roles like coaching, whether it was basketball, cricket, to earn a little bit of money on the side, and when we were away, we got reimbursed.

So, I wasn’t making money, but I was doing everything I wanted to do. So, you made it work, but there were many players when I played that when they got to 26, 27, they were like, Oh, You are not going to make money.

What keeps you going?

I think it is just the love of being part of the White Ferns. And I still feel like I can contribute to any team I play in. And I know once I am retired that you are a long time finished. And I have always felt that when I stop enjoying not only the playing but the training and I feel like I am not able to contribute, then I’ll give it away. But I feel like I have always found ways to keep contributi­ng.

And I have always loved it and probably always will love it.

And so it is that feeling of knowing that when you call it time, that you are never going to be able to do it again. And that motivates me to keep getting the best out of myself.

There’s always World Cups and pinnacle events just around the corner that I think I can contribute to this team. And I’m still motivated to win a World Cup. And those are the little things that keep me going.

What are your memories from playing in the Olympic Basketball in 2008? The fondest memories from that game?

I remember, growing up, I used to watch a lot of American sport on TV. And to play the USA women’s basketball team, who were the best in the world at the time, was pretty special, to try and compete with them. And just singing the national anthem at an Olympic Games was really cool. And to rub shoulders with some of the best athletes in the world. There were the likes of Roger Federer, Michael Phelps and LeBron James at those Games. To be in the same space as them as a young 19yearold was really inspiring.

And it made me want to be an athlete even more, whatever sport that was in.

Cricket is included in the 2028 Olympics at Los Angeles.

It is so exciting for the growth of the game, not only women’s cricket, but men’s as well. And yeah, the Olympics have changed drasticall­y over the years in terms of the sports that we play.

We have had 3x3 basketball, and I guess the games that are growing all around the world. So for any young cricketer who has probably never thought about going to the Olympics, now there is an opportunit­y to attend. So yeah, as an Olympic athlete who has been there for a different sport, I think it is still one of the most exciting events you can be a part of.

And I know the eyes that are on those events. And when we played at the Commonweal­th Games, the number of New Zealanders that watched cricket that perhaps hadn’t watched before.

So yeah, it is great for the growth of the men’s and the women’s game globally.

You would be 40 then. You feel you might still have a second Olympics in you?

Oh, it would be an amazing feat if 20 years after my first one, I could participat­e in a different sport. If I am fit enough and I am playing well enough, we won’t put it out of the question.

But it is a long, long way away for me at 36 years old to be thinking about that. And my goal is to be able to perform in Bangladesh with the White Ferns in the T20 World Cup first.

Looking back at your career, what do you consider have been the highlights?

As a cricketer, winning a World Cup, I think is the pinnacle, but we did not. Early on in my career, we came second three times and, you know, that was a failure to me. But now that I look back on that, the fact that we played in three World Cup finals is an achievemen­t in itself. Playing at Lord’s in that 2020 World Cup final, although the game went terribly for us, was a real highlight.

It sounds, I guess, a bit strange, but just to be a part of the White Ferns in a fully profession­al era from where we came from has been a real highlight for me to be a part of that and just watch the game grow in New Zealand.

It makes me really proud that I have been through both eras and yeah, we haven’t won a World Cup. And that is what I have always been driven to do. So those World Cups early on were disappoint­ing.

But if I can do that before I retire, I will be one happy cricketer.

The toughest bowlers you have faced over the years? A: I was actually talking about it the other day to the girls.

I found the combinatio­n of Katherine Brunt and Anya Shrubsole relentless.

And then I reckon I had my most competitiv­e challenges with Jhulan Goswami. I loved the challenge of facing her in oneday cricket in particular. She was just so ruthless with the ball and you felt like you were in the battle with every ball.

The batters you have admired?

Karen Rolton was probably the first female cricketer that I was almost wowed by in terms of how hard she hit the ball, but she didn’t play for that much longer when I started. And unfortunat­ely, Meg Lanning scored a ton of runs against New Zealand. And as I was captain, she scored so many hundreds and I could never come up with ways to get her out. She was just so determined and I found her the hardest batter to prepare for in terms of captaincy.

Favourite male cricketers?

Two athletes that used to make me stop and watch them were Michael Jordan and Sachin Tendulkar. Whenever those two people were on, I just was fixated on the TV.

I loved Tendulkar’s presence at the crease. I loved the amount of runs he scored. And he was the one batter that I remember just always wanting to watch.

What is the state of women’s cricket in New Zealand now? How has it evolved over the years from the time you were a little girl?

It is unrecognis­able. And I can only speak from my experience at Otago. When I started, we were very parttime. We only trained for a couple of months of the year. We had volunteer coaches.

Now I go back to Dunedin, we have a fulltime coach in Craig Cumming, who works tirelessly with all the players. We have up to 20 to 25 people turn up to our team training.

We have assistant coaches. Just the number of young players that are now playing want to get contracted and play first and foremost for their regions in the Super Smash and now the White Ferns – it is just so different.

You know, players are recognised everywhere they go in Dunedin, the Sparks players, whereas back in the day, it was very rare anyone knew any female cricketers.

So the depth that we are creating through putting women’s cricket on the television and young girls wanting to be cricketers, it is so different.

You can’t even measure the difference that there is now to when I first started. And probably that is why I am still here.

(Sony Sports Network has acquired the exclusive broadcast rights of New Zealand Cricket for seven years).

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