India won the Women’s Under-19 T20 World Cup

New Delhi. The Indian cricket team in South Africa created history again after 16 years. The work which was done by Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s team Indian in 2007, was done by the women’s cricket team led by Shefali Verma. India defeated England and won the title of the Women’s Under-19 T20 World Cup for the first time. The Indian women’s cricket team has won a World Cup for the first time. Trisha Reddy played an important role in India’s World Cup win. He scored the highest 24 runs in the final and formed a significant 46 -run partnership with Soumya Tiwari for the third wicket.

Trisha Reddy has an important role in this success of her father Gongari Reddy. He struggled a lot to make the daughter a cricketer. Along with running the gym, he used to work as a fitness trainer in the hotel. But, to make the daughter a cricketer, he quit his job and sold the gym at half a price. Not only this, shifted to Secunderabad. There is no obstacle due to money in the daughter’s cricket training. Therefore, he also sold his four acres of farming land. The daughter also remembered the father’s struggles and gave India the World Cup by playing an important innings in the final of the Under-19 World Cup and fulfilled the father’s dream.

Father sold the ground to make Trisha a cricketer
Trisha’s father said, “I played hockey on behalf of my state’s under-16 team before focusing on my fitness business and job. I used to play cricket along with hockey and wanted my child to play cricket. For this reason, I decided to shift the daughter from Bhadrachalam to Secunderabad. I had to sell my gym to one of my relatives at half the price at the market rate. Later, I also sold 4 acres of land for daughter’s training. It is the result of her passion to see the daughter helping India win the U-19 World Cup. I can bear any loss to see such a victory.

In childhood, she used to watch cricket on TV instead of cartoons
The father had dreamed for Trisha since childhood that he became a cricketer. For this reason, he was telling his wife that daughter watched a cricket match on TV instead of cartoons. Recalling the old days, the father said, “When Trisha was born, I told my wife that when she starts watching TV, we will show her cricket match on TV instead of cartoons. When she was two and a half years old, I started teaching her cricket with plastic bat and ball. When she was five years old, I used to take her to the gym with me and throw her 300 balls daily. Later I got a cement pitch built on the local cricket ground and the time left after my job and gym was spent with Trisha on the field.

The father’s hard work also got an early benefit and within 2 years of the shift of Secunderabad, Trisha started playing with the under-16 team of Hyderabad. He confirmed his place in the under-19 and then under-23 teams in 2014-15. After this, I entered Team India and now the powerful innings in the final of the Under-19 World Cup has fulfilled not only the father, but also the dream of the country.