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Nayar's UP Warriorz mission: raise skills, amplify mindsets, bring WPL glory

As the new head coach of the franchise, Nayar reflects on the landscape ahead in the women's game

Ashish Pant
10-Aug-2025 • 2 hrs ago
Zakir Khan, chief journey officer of UP Warriorz, with Abhishek Nayar

Head coach Abhishek Nayar with Zakir Khan, UP Warriorz' chief journey officer  •  UP Warriorz

Abhishek Nayar has whipped up quite a CV despite only retiring from all forms of the game six years back: Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) assistant coach, Trinbago Knight Riders (TKR) head coach, India batting coach and endorsements from players of international repute. His latest role sees him venture into women's cricket as head coach of UP Warriorz (UPW) in the Women's Premier League (WPL) for the 2026 season.
The Nayar-UPW association isn't a new one. He's run a few training camps for them in the last few years and worked with a some players individually, including captain Deepti Sharma. He is also good friends with Kshemal Waingankar, his former Mumbai team-mate and the COO and director of cricket for UPW. So when the possibility of leading the UPW backroom staff opened up, the decision was an easy one for Nayar.
"I have spent some time with people associated in the UP Warriorz ecosystem. I used to follow how they're going, their performances. There was a bit of an emotional connect even without really, really being associated with them," Nayar told ESPNcricinfo. "For me, when the opportunity came and they were trying to restructure the support system, it was quite an easy decision, because I already had a bit of affinity towards the franchise, an understanding of how the franchise works, the ownership, and their whole value system and approach to the WPL and to women cricketers. So for me, it wasn't a very hard one.
"The hardest decision in my head was more about, will I be able to understand women's cricket as well as I've managed to understand men's cricket. But I pride myself on doing the work and hopefully getting there."
While this is Nayar's first time helming a women's franchise team, he has had stints with women's teams in recent years. Ahead of the 2024 women's T20 World Cup, Jon Lewis, the then head coach of England women (and UPW), got the team to India for two training camps, which were overseen by Nayar. While he agrees it was a different kind of challenge, Nayar says the stint helped enhance his coaching prowess.
"For me, it was an experience like this one is, and I never let go of an experience in life," Nayar said. "So I took up the challenge. It was very, very awkward for me the first day, because getting the... you're so used to saying 'batsman' all the time, so to start saying batter was my initial challenge. But now I'm getting a hold of it.
"Luckily, commentary then helped me a lot to understand the 25 yards, 30 yards, the small differences, but yeah, it was a challenge, but I absolutely loved working with the England women players. And that was my first thought process that I can coach a lot more than manage.
"[I am] still in touch with a lot of the players there and a lot of the people that I worked with who are now actually actively currently part of the last series that India played [against England in July]."
"You see fitter cricketers, you see their movement patterns a lot better. Their throws are a lot faster. That is a statement as to where WPL is taking Indian cricket and the impact it's going to have in the years to come, just like IPL had on men's cricket"
Abhishek Nayar
By taking up the UPW role, Nayar finds himself in a unique position. He is the only one with a high-profile role in both the WPL and IPL - UPW head coach and KKR assistant coach. According to Nayar, while the basic process remains the same, there is a lot more coaching involved in women's cricket and the space to enhance the skills of a player as opposed to men's, where it is mostly about management.
"With men's cricket, once you start working with elite players, there's less coaching, there's more mentoring because it's more about understanding the mind and not so much the technique," Nayar said. "I think with women cricketers today, in regards to a coach, there's a lot of excitement because you can actually help amplify the skill as well as the mindset. You can coach a lot more.
"In men's cricket, you need to manage a lot more rather than coach. You're not really developing a player when you're coaching in men's cricket. Very rarely will you see someone innovating and coming up with a new shot, or you're suddenly saying, 'oh, Shubman's playing something different or he's playing a scoop shot'. Very far and few.
"I was watching this recent India-England [women's] series, and I could see that our women cricketers are growing. You can see a difference in the shots they're making, you can see that they are bowling new deliveries, they're tactically sounder. So you can see that growth. Men's cricket is still a lot between the ears. With women's cricket, there's a lot in the skill as well, but a lot you can do in between the ears as well. So I think it's exciting. It's going to be fun."
With the next WPL season just a few months away, Nayar has already linked up with the UPW backroom staff to formulate plans. They had a training camp and trials in Chennai recently, with Nayar trying to understand the domestic ecosystem and "what the talent is besides all the top players in Indian cricket".
Nayar has followed the WPL from the inaugural season and firmly believes the tournament is a game-changer for women's cricket.
"I think the cricket has been crazy [at the WPL]. While I have my trials here [in Chennai], there's a stark difference in me watching a trial two years ago to what I'm seeing today in regards to the six-hitting ability of a women's cricketer and the ability to play a sweep and reverse sweep initially in the innings. And that all boils down to the WPL.
"For me, the biggest difference has been the levels of fitness in every women's cricketer. You see fitter cricketers, you see their movement patterns a lot better. Their throws are a lot faster. That is a statement as to where WPL is taking Indian cricket and the impact it's going to have in the years to come, just like IPL had on men's cricket. I'm 200% sure that the WPL will continue to have this sort of an impact on women cricketers all around."
The one aspect Nayar is yet to get his head around as he gets more involved in women's cricket is the scouting and introduction of newer players into the system. But with the onset of women's leagues in Bengal, Maharashtra, Delhi and now Karnataka, Nayar is confident that scouting will get easier.
"It's very new to me. I've been looking up to the KKR scouting for a while and that helps you understand men's cricket a lot better. You already have your contacts in men's cricket," Nayar said. "With women's cricket, I'm trying to use the same formula now that I've just come in.
"It's still very early stages, but I think it will end up being quite similar wherein you start following leagues. There's a Delhi Premier League, a Bengal league that happened, a Maharashtra league. We'll have to start tapping into that slowly and start understanding that.
"Luckily, we have time this year. So I think it will still be pretty much the same where we try and get feedback from coaches who've been in the system for a long time. Coaches who've understood women's cricket and been part of it right from the inception and academies around India as well who play a major role in making sure these cricketers then go on to play state."
After a strong start in 2023, where they qualified for the playoffs, UPW have had two underwhelming seasons in 2024 and 2025, finishing second to bottom and bottom on the points table. Now with Nayar on board, the franchise will hope for a better 2026 season as they chase the elusive WPL title.

Ashish Pant is a sub-editor with ESPNcricinfo

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