Sindhuja Reddy Salguti, has played in India as an opening batswoman and wicket-keeper for the Hyderabad Women’s Cricket Association in the Ranji Trophy Circuit from 2005 through 2015.
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Sindhuja Reddy Salguti, has played in India as an opening batswoman and wicket-keeper for the Hyderabad Women’s Cricket Association in the Ranji Trophy Circuit from 2005 through 2015.
In 2008, before her migration to the United States, she was selected to a two-weeks India Under-19 training camp, however, no tour resulted from the camp and it was cancelled. Recognized as an up and coming Indian women’s cricket star; a nation with over one billion people, it was indeed an honor and privelige, and it is a pity Sindhuja never got the opportunity to represent India on its national women’s World Cup Squad. Thus, India’s loss was America’s gain, as Sindhuja almost immediately was representing the Northern California Cricket Association, Atlantis Cricket Club - NY, and the USA National Women’s Cricket Team.
In order to fully understand the extent of Sindhuja’s achievements and her distinguished journey of being selected to represent India and now the USA, one must first consider the popularity of the sport and its legends. The sport of cricket is the most popular sport amongst the Indian population. In fact, a recent India government survey suggests that there are roughly 52 million competitive cricketers in the country of India. To rise to the top 15-30 selectees for India’s national team or the roughly 450 elite athletes that compete for all 29 states in the popular Ranji Trophy Circuit out of a total population of 1.2 billion is astounding and almost mathematically impossible.
Despite such impossible odds, Sindhuja decided early on that she too wanted to rise through the ranks. Nothing could stop her from succeeding and becoming one of India’s top women cricketer role models. Sindhuja’s journey began in Hyderabad, where her strict father, setting high standards in cricket himself, demonstrated such a love for the game, both on and off the field.
For many years, the distinct roar of an annoying engine was Sindhuja’s alarm clock. A groggy 11-year-old Sindhuja reluctantly pulled herself out of bed to join her father, Spuradhar Reddy, and older brother, Mohinder Reddy, when they rode to the Hindi Maha Vidhyalaya Cricket Academy grounds in Hyderabad at 4:00 am. Both Sindhuja and her brother were constantly indulged in the game of cricket. Sindhuja always aimed to make her father proud. The joy it brought her father when she would score and receive praise from her coaches - including widely known head coach, Manohar Reddy - was all the motivation she needed.
The sharp eye of another coach at the academy, former first-class cricketer Vijay Kumar, saw innate talent in Sindhuja. She was a natural and with Vijay being a wicket-keeper himself, he saw similar traits in Sindhuja as she often would hit the ball straight. Vijay Kumar referred her to Purnima Rau, a coach who groomed the Hyderabad Women’s Cricket teams and is now the Head National Coach for India’s Senior Women’s Cricket Team. In her tenure, Rau groomed and handed off two captains to India’s Women's Cricket Team (Mithali Raj and Ghulan Goswami). Sindhuja’s father was delighted when she got hooked to the game. He was on cloud nine to witness his daughter’s love for the game continue to intensify just as his had throughout the years.
“In a way, I was forced into something and I wanted to deliver - especially for my father. I always wanted to be a great cricketer. I was good at it, I saw my father’s joy in it, and it was my interest. Cricket was something in which I wanted to push myself,” Sindhuja says with regard to her love of the sport.
Head coach Manohar Reddy soon took Sindhuja under his wing and the rest was history in the making. Her drive and persistent determination to do away with anything previously distracting her from solely focusing on cricket, paved the way for what was to come. “Coach Manohar was a hard taskmaster. Early each morning as part of my training, he used to make me run, and at times, to make it even more interesting, he used to make me run in the evenings under the flood lights of the ground. Coach also wanted me at the ground well before sunrise. His idea was that when the sun comes up you should be ready for batting. When the bowlers come in, you can bat immediately and get extra time in the nets. I used to bat for two hours at a stretch. After practice, I would have breakfast at the ground and change at the ground for school. My dad used to then take me to school,” Sindhuja says.
After school hours, Sindhuja headed back to Hindi Maha Vidhyalaya Cricket Academy where Coach Manohar was waiting with the floodlights on for more training. She managed to spend an hour brushing up on her school lessons after which lights were out by 9:00 pm.
Like most women cricketers, Sindhuja also grew up facing boys in the nets, but coach Manohar was not one for mollycoddling. The boys, most of them age-group cricketers, were instructed not to hold back. The faster they bowled at Sindhuja, the greater the appreciation they received from the coach. Once when Sindhuja was unable to connect while trying to cut and pull using only a stump as a bat, the coach picked up another stump and hit her on her calf. If she was slacking during a catching session, the bowling machine speed would be hiked up, and the number of balls used, increased. If one of her hands turned blue, it was tied up behind her back and Sindhuja had to complete the catching drills with the other hand.
“With all this happening at that time, I was angry with the coach. I used to think ‘how could he treat me like this? This is just too much!’ But today I understand and know that if I hadn’t played through the pain, I wouldn’t’t have achieved and accomplished what I have today,” Sindhuja says.
Sindhuja’s father, Spuradhar, recalls those tough days. “Coach Manohar and Sadanand told me, ‘Your daughter will play for India.’ I was in tears, tears of joy, and didn’t believe it was possible because Sindhuja was already about 14 years old. But the coach told me it will happen if the family and Sindhuja were ready to make sacrifices,” Spuradhar says.
By this time, Sindhuja, at the age of only 14, was included in the probables for Andhra Pradesh Senior Women’s Cricket. She was listed as a stand-by for the tournament, but her career choice was significantly influenced by her prodigious progress and the prophetic words of her coach, who had foreseen her wearing an India cap.
“I was around 15 or 16 when I became a part of the team that would be named the All India Sub Juniors Women’s Under 16 National Champions, and the very next year I led the team as captain with the ex-captains and senior cricketers playing under me. I didn’t’t know if I would do a good job. But fortunately, the seniors did listen to me and supported me,” Sindhuja says. Such acclaim had no bearing on Sindhuja’s outlook towards cricket. The driving force that kept her motivated over the years was the sacrifice her parents had made.
“My debut series put a lot of pressure on me because my dad was expecting me to perform well. At the end of the day, I had to call my dad and tell him how I performed. If I didn’t score runs I would get a yelling. He would say things like, “You are an ‘average player’”. On a day when I scored a hundred, he would ask me how my wicket-keeping and batting was, or how many catches I had dropped.”
By 2007, Sindhuja was playing with the All India Seniors Team in the National One Day Tournament and also in the All India Juniors Women Tournaments. Being on both teams required a lot out of her as she had to take the lessons learnt from seniors and then teach her fellow team mates in the junior women’s team. Sindhuja become more of a leader making it easy for the junior women.
Following her marriage, Sindhuja moved to the United States of America and has yet to stop playing cricket. She has already made her mark in the United States as a cricketer, representing a couple cricket clubs - one of them being Atlantis Cricket Club of New York. She’s also won two prestigious national awards while representing Atlantis at the 2016 Georgia Women Cricket Association’s Annual Women’s T-20 Tournament (Best Wicket-keeper of the Tournament and Woman-of-the-Match awards).