The popular name is ‘Virat Kohli’. India’s cricketing icon has many fans here in Dungra Chhota.
It’s after 10 on a winter morning and the dozen or so young residents are engrossed in a game. The square patch of open land flanked by bright green corn fields will not strike you as a cricket field, but the cricket enthusiasts of this village in Banswara district know each and every yard of it, from the popping crease to the boundary line.
Everyone knows the most effective way of striking up a conversation with cricket fans is to ask about their favourite players. Here, it may be Virat Kohli to start with, but other names also get thrown up soon enough – Rohit Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah, Suryakumar Yadav, Mohammed Siraj…
Finally, 18-year-old Shivam Labana adds, “I like Smriti Mandhana.” The left-handed opening batter and ex-captain of the India Women T20 squad is one of the most popular cricketers in the country.
But she is not the only left-handed batter being discussed on this field, as we soon find out.
Among the gaggle of aspiring bowlers and batters – all boys – the single girl stands out. Just nine years old, Hitakshi Rahul Harkishi is fully kitted in white shoes and batting pads with thigh and elbow guards securely strapped onto her slight frame.










