'The BCCI should support our participation in the Women's Big Bash'
India Women's captain Mithali Raj on the team's recent success going into the World T20, and utilsing opportunities to raise the game's profile
The Australia tour was very important and all of us knew that it would be very challenging to beat them at home as very few of our players had experience on those fast tracks. Winning the T20 series was a good experience for the whole team and it has given a lot of confidence to the players. We have come good as a unit. Winning before the World Cup was good timing as well.
The team has been together for two years and most of the players have played for Indian Railways, who I captain [in domestic cricket]. We are together round the year. That develops a bond and I don't have to work too much. Earlier, our batting never clicked in T20s. Only one or two players would score and the team was dependent on them. Now, we have every player contributing to the team's performance and that has made a lot of difference. Our top order scored runs in Australia and our fielding was really good.
"Since we have done well against Australia and Sri Lanka, the people's expectations have risen, and it is important that we use this platform to promote women's cricket in India"
I think it has, after our wins in the last two series. We are strong contenders for the World Cup. Earlier, it used to feel like those two teams are way ahead of the rest, but now with the transformation in the Indian team - West Indies has been doing well and New Zealand have done well against Australia - the gap is closing.
Yes, because we have our domestic structure in place and the ICC Championship has done a lot of good. We get to play every team before the World Cup, touring in different conditions besides a few series at home. It gives a lot of opportunities to the youngsters. As we play more, we get to see who a quality player is and what plans and strategies would work for the team. Whenever you undergo transformation, a couple of good players always emerge, like Smriti Mandhana and Anuja Patil, which will only increase the depth for the team.
Yes, because there are players who come from middle-class or lower middle-class backgrounds and struggle to buy a kit and earn a living. They completely depend on the state association. With central contracts, you are very well looked after by the board. You do not have to be bothered about anything else. Just put in the hard work and do well for the country.
The World Cup, as an event, carries a lot of pressure, irrespective of the number of caps you have earned, and the pressure doubles when you play at home. Since we have done well against Australia and Sri Lanka, the people's expectations have risen, and it is important that we use this platform to promote women's cricket in India, because it is the best opportunity. The team has good momentum and all the players are confident, so it is the right time for us to play a good brand of cricket for people to appreciate in India and to market the sport.
The double headers generated a lot of viewership and promoted women's cricket around the globe in a better way. I think the Big Bash or an IPL-style tournament would give an impetus to women's cricket. Women's cricket can stand alone as a brand, but right now it needs men's cricket to support it.
It is when you haven't played an opposition for a long time, like we didn't know much about the South African team when we played them a couple of years back, because we last played them in 2009. We struggled then but with the ICC Championship, we play every team. So we have a video analyst coming with the team and we have the footage, but it's difficult when you play a team after a long time.
Yes, the approach to fitness is a lot more professional and there is a physio who deals with rehab and injury. The player's knowledge of their body and how to go about in and outside a competition is far better than what it was when I started.
"Earlier, it used to feel like Australia and England are way ahead of the rest, but now with the transformation in the Indian team, the gap is closing"
Yes, because when you play with the best and interact with them, there are cultural interactions. You learn a lot by just mingling and it gives the young players - someone like Smriti Mandhana, Harmanpreet Kaur or Veda Krishnamurthy - the chance to develop as cricketers and mature very quickly, which is what India needs at the moment.
I think the BCCI will definitely be very supportive, because we don't have the IPL. If the Aussies or England want us in the tournament, the BCCI should be positive enough to support us, because it will benefit them and help the players get experience. When you see them in the next T20 World Cup, they'd be different players.
It should, and there is a possibility if our matches are televised. That attracts a lot of brands and corporate sponsorships for individual players. If only a few games are televised and you don't have a follow-up, like no live coverage of the Sri Lanka series after the Australia series, where we did so well, things will not improve.
I definitely want to play them as it is the ultimate challenge for any cricketer to excel in that format. It challenges your skill, mental ability and physical endurance.
I think Star Sports covered the T20 Super League and got a good response. If the domestic T20 Super League or the one-day Super League is televised, it will get a lot of attention.
With the kind of momentum we have, we should at least qualify for the semi-finals. From there, it's anyone's game.
Gaurav Kalra is a senior editor at ESPNcricinfo. @gauravkalra75