Cricket cup sees growth in women playing

Jasmine Sandhar
BBC Midlands Today
BBC Millie can only be seen from the shoulders up, but she is smiling with her teeth and looking off to the side. She has long black hair which has been tied up into a low ponytail with a middle part. She is wearing a black crew neck sports T-shirt. Out of focus behind her are other players standing together and plastic orange cricket stumps on a green astro floor.BBC
Millie said she started off playing cricket in a team that was only made up of boys

Cricket is "not just a boys' sport" but women need more support to take up the sport, according to organisers of a contest set up to celebrate the Sikh festival of Vaisakhi.

The Vaisakhi Cricket Cup has been held for three years and, for the first time, more women took part than men, with 28 out of the more than 50 involved this year.

The event, at Warwickshire's home ground of Edgbaston, was organised by the Warwickshire Cricket Foundation.

"We want to try and encourage more females to play cricket so it's more of a sport for everybody to join in," community officer Simran Kaur Riat said.

She has been working on projects to improve the gender balance of cricketers but this is one of the larger ones she oversees.

"It's really important that we have more visual role models like myself in the community," she added.

Warwickshire Cricket Foundation Simran is wearing a navy blue long-sleeved sports polo top and matching trousers. She has a navy blue lanyard around her neck and is holding a clipboard that has the yellow Warwickshire Cricket Foundation logo printed on the back of it. In the other hand she is holding a pen and she has a french manicure. She is smiling with her teeth and looking off to the side. Simran has long, dark brown hair. The background is out of focus, but there are white sheets and netting, as well as orange plastic cricket stumps on the green astro floor.Warwickshire Cricket Foundation
Simran Kaur Riat said she was delighted to see more women taking part this year

The cup is organised in celebration of the religious spring festival, which marks the birth of the Sikh community and the start of the solar new year for Hindus.

Those taking part at the weekend were involved in a pairs tournament, with players divided into teams of two.

Millie has taken part in the tournament every year so far and says she feels it supports her culture and also that cricket is her passion.

Although the 15-year-old is currently looking for a new club to join, when she first started playing, she was on an all-male team.

"You see the difference because the girls get less games," she recalled.

"Women playing cricket needs to definitely be advertised more but this event shows that it's not just a boys' sport."

Although the number of men regularly playing cricket is higher than the number of women, recent data from Sport England shows that there has been a significant increase in female players over the past decade.

Warwickshire Cricket Foundation A girl is hunched over in playing position front of three orange plastic cricket stumps, ready to bat. She is wearing a black hoodie with black tracksuit bottoms that have a whit stripe going up the side of the leg. She is holding a black cricket bat with neon pink and yellow patterns on it. Her hands are tightly gripped around the neon yellow handle of the bat as she wears a face of concentration. She had black, straight, medium length hair which she has left down. behind her is a white sheet with netting and a green astro floor.Warwickshire Cricket Foundation
Although there are more men playing cricket than women in England, the number of female players is increasing, officials say

Millie's father, Jai, is supportive of his daughter's involvement and thought it was making the game more diverse.

"The tradition of it being a men's sport is a very unfortunate thing, but I'm glad that the exposure is there now," he added.

In another first, the entire tournament was organised and delivered by a team of female community coaches.

Seeing this change has been a highlight for Anusha Chauhan, who acted as an umpire at the event.

"I've seen how hard it is for women and girls," she said.

"It's really nice to see that there's so many new opportunities for women to get involved and I think it's just really important to support it where you can."

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