It is this competitive attitude that has made Kanwar stand out across the two WPL seasons, even outside the Giants camp. Her wicket tally of ten this season placed her joint fourth on the top wicket-takers’ list, on which she was surrounded by international names. She may not have had as much experience last year, but her ability to bounce back from a bad day at the office had been on show in 2023 as well, against the established Shafali Verma.»There was a match against Delhi in which Shafali had hit me a lot [23 runs off eight balls],» Kanwar says. «When we played Delhi in the second leg, I planned a lot for how to bowl to her. I just wanted to get her out because she had scored so much off me earlier. I wanted to bowl on her body as much as possible, because if you give her room, she can hit the ball anywhere.» And as soon as Shafali made room for a big swing, Kanwar adjusted her line to bowl on her pads and the ball ricocheted onto the stumps.Many wickets Kanwar has collected over the last two years have been down to her pace variations — which she might not have had to work too hard on to master. While growing up in Shimla with her siblings and playing cricket with the boys at school during recess, Kanwar used to bowl medium pace. When her father saw her potential and seriousness towards the game, he got her enrolled at the only academy in Dharamsala that trains girls. Kanwar soon made it to Himachal’s Under-19 team, as a medium-pacer, but one year into the professional game, she was told bowling spin would suit her body better.»When I used to play with the Cosco ball [in gully cricket], I used to bowl spin along with medium pace and I picked up a lot of wickets when I bowled spin there,» she says. «I thought this was so convenient: the run-up is just four steps and I’m also getting wickets!» () Then my coach also told me that spin was suiting me better because I didn’t have much pace for a medium-pacer and I was also not that tall. So my coach, Pawan Sen sir, told me to switch to spin.»After one year at Under-19, I changed to left-arm spin. It suited my body and got me wickets, so I was very happy with that.»

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This year Giants had their regular captain Beth Mooney, who missed the last WPL with an injury, take over. They also had a new head coach, Michael Klinger. Even though both hadn’t seen Kanwar closely last time, they entrusted the 26-year-old with the big responsibility of bowling both in the powerplay and at the death often. Sixteen of her 29 overs in the tournament were bowled in those two phases, in which she conceded just 7.5 an over.Along with th wicket of Sophie Devine, Kanwar also picked up those of Hayley Matthews, Smriti Mandhana, Shafali Verma and others this season•BCCI»She’s competitive and she knows what she wants, so sometimes we have a little argument on the field about what field to set,» Mooney said with a laugh at a press conference after Giants’ clash against RCB in which Kanwar dismissed Devine. «If I could pick one player in India to have in my team, it’s probably her. She’s very competitive, she bowls left-arm spin and it’s naturally pretty effective over here.»She bowls the real tough overs. I throw her in the deep end a fair bit and she loves it. She usually bowls a couple in the powerplay and a couple at the end and usually with the short side [of the boundary]. She’s been amazing for us; I can’t speak more highly of her, and hopefully one day we’ll see her in the India shirt.»Kanwar was often seen consulting Ashleigh Gardner during the season. Their camaraderie was especially on show in Giants’ second match against defending champions Mumbai Indians, who chased down 91 runs in the last six overs largely because of Harmanpreet Kaur’s stunning 95 not out off 48 balls. Kanwar and Gardner were the only bowlers to concede under six runs an over, while everyone else from their team went at over ten. Having conceded just 11 in her first three, Kanwar was given the tough 19th over when Mumbai needed 23 off 12. Kanwar had a quick chat with Gardner before the over and did extremely well to give away just three singles in four balls after Harmanpreet hammered a six on the second ball of the over. Kanwar eventually went for ten runs, and Gardner couldn’t defend 12 in the last over.»Ash Gardner is an offspinner and she tells me how to bowl in what kind of situations, like in powerplays, because she bowls very well in powerplays and death overs,» Kanwar says. «I also ask her about her reading of the pitches, because she’s very knowledgeable about that. So I ask her how’s the wicket today, how to bowl on it, and she explains very well to me.»Like Saika Ishaque and Shreyanka Patil last year, Kanwar emerged as one of the most promising uncapped players this WPL, along with RCB’s Asha Sobhana. Where Kanwar leaves most of her rivals behind is with her economy rate in the death overs — her 7.50 in this phase this WPL was the joint third-best after Sophie Molineux (7.20) and Patil (7.38). The next best Indian spinner on that list is Sobhana with 8.57.In the middle overs too, Kanwar was effective at keeping batters quiet, with an economy rate of 6.69 and regular wickets. Her five in that phase were behind only Ellyse Perry, Sobhana, Arundhati Reddy and Radha Yadav.Kanwar can bowl the big overs, she can take down the big batters, and she can hold her own on the big stage. Sobhana earned an India call-up recently for the Bangladesh tour, and there’s a good chance Kanwar might get hers soon.

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