Mirza, 36, who bowed out of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis championship late on Tuesday, is wanting ahead to guiding the subsequent technology of Indian champions.
“This has nothing to do with cricket,” she mentioned of her appointment with RCB. “These younger girls have never been in positions where they’ve had so much money, millions riding on them.”
The Hyderabadi, a former world No. 1 and six-time main winner, in the most well-liked of girls’s sports activities, mentioned, “Many of them haven’t been on TV, haven’t done shoots for advertisements.
“It’s really easy to get distracted, it is also simple to tense up and really feel the stress as a result of there’s a lot expectation on you. I’ll be capable to share my experiences and make them really feel extra comfy with the transition. It’s an enormous deal for lots of people to be taking part in for groups which have put a lot cash in it.”
“It’s nice as a result of it will get me to do one thing that I need to do. I’m in a position to share my expertise in attempting to make ladies’s sport higher and extra accepted, for the longer term within the subcontinent.”
Mirza, who has been at the forefront of women’s issues, has also constantly been asked about being a Muslim woman in sport, she argued that while religion was a personal space, her achievements underlined great possibilities.
“Every time I step on the courtroom, I’m probably not pondering, I’m this Muslim lady that is attempting to do that. I do not assume a Christian or Hindu is doing that. I do not have a look at it like that,” she mentioned.
Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com