“Day in and day out, after missing one or two tournaments, I thought WPL is the platform where I have to do well and win that trophy back. And then when the physios told me that I’m going to miss out, I was like, ‘hell, no’.”We had an awards function in Mumbai. I had to fly from Bangalore to Mumbai when I heard the news [about missing WPL]. I went to Jemi’s [Jemimah Rodrigues] place and I just broke down. I didn’t know how to react to this.”It took her a while to recover. She had the support of her India team-mates, her coach and family. To distract herself, she tried her hand at different sports, started painting, learnt how to play the guitar, made a trip to Wimbledon. She also started maintaining a diary where she would record her day-to-day life.”I was just jotting down a few points. Whether I’m upset, whether I’m happy, whether I’m feeling nervous or excited, be it the smallest of small things,” she said. “Even if it was just doing my strength session or just my rehab at the gym, I would write a few points about what I was grateful for that day.Shreyanka Patil returned to competitive cricket after 11 months•ACC”That’s when I started getting out of that phase. And then I was like, no matter what, now I’m going to miss such tournaments, I’ve missed a lot of cricket, let me get as fit as possible – mentally, physically – and then just be back on the field and just roar.”During her rehab, Patil also spent a lot of time at the CoE. Being in and out of the CoE was tough. She would go in, get the all-clear, get injured again and go back in. But she embraced her situation gradually. She made a lot of friends there, notably Suryakumar Yadav, who was recovering after undergoing surgery for a sports hernia.”Initially, it was tricky,” Patil said. “Then once I started spending a lot of time with all the friends [at CoE], I got comfortable with them. I started sharing my own injury story, and they did too. SKY is such a lovely person. He was there for about one month or so, my last rehab bit.”The conversations we had were amazing. We didn’t really talk about cricket. It was about life, because he also faced a few injuries. He just asked me to be patient. He always said, ‘you just keep doing your thing and everything else will come back to you’.”He kept motivating me. When I was doing my practice session, he would encourage me, help me in the gym. Obviously, someone like SKY coming and talking to us makes a huge difference.

“There were so many people. Riyan [Parag], who had, again, gone through a lot. Mayank [Yadav], who faced so many injuries. He has missed out on a lot of cricket. Talking to all of these people made me feel much calmer, because I felt I was not alone in this. It became like a family, and yeah, I didn’t feel like it was like a big 11 months.”I started enjoying my rehab. I started enjoying each and every session. Everyone was encouraging everyone there and it was such a lovely environment to be around.”Patil is injury-free for now, and ready to make up for lost time. She didn’t make it to India’s ODI World Cup squad, which begins later this month, an eventuality she was prepared for. In a way, it’s fitting that she is making her comeback at the WCPL, where she first grabbed headlines in 2023, being the highest wicket-taker.”When I got picked by Barbados Royals and I’d not played for 11 months, I just closed my eyes and thought of the first year I played and I’m like, maybe it’s just meant to happen,” she said. “I’m again starting with WCPL and then moving forward with WPL and India, stuff like that. So, I’m looking forward.”After 11 months of being away from cricket, Patil now has a better understanding of her body, when to stop and when to push. She has sulked long enough and now just wants to “go out there, perform, win games”.

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