He replaces WV Raman, coming back after his last stint had ended in an acrimonious fallout with Mithali Raj
Ramesh Powar had first been appointed as India Women’s coach in July 2018 in an interim capacity
Ramesh Powar has returned as the India Women coach, after his first stint ended in acrimony in late 2018 amid a fallout with Mithali Raj.
Powar was replaced by WV Raman, and will now take over from Raman. While Raman’s coaching tenure began in December 2018, the Indian team has been largely inactive for almost two years, including the time period after which the Covid-19 pandemic struck.
Powar was selected by the Cricket Advisory Committee, comprising Madan Lal, RP Singh and Sulakshana Naik, who interviewed a number of candidates for the post which saw 35 applications. Besides Powar and Raman – who re-applied – the others in the fray were Hrishikesh Kanitkar, Ajay Ratra, Mamtha Maben, Devika Vaidya, former chair of selectors Hemlatha Kala, and former assistant coach Suman Sharma.
Powar had first been appointed as coach in July 2018 in an interim capacity, and his contract was then extended to cover the 2018 T20 World Cup in the Caribbean. While India reached the semi-finals of the event, its aftermath had Raj and Powar trading accusations, with Raj saying she felt “deflated, depressed and let down” and Powar countering that Raj had “threatened to retire” mid-tournament if she wasn’t given the opener’s slot.
The controversy meant Powar’s contract was not renewed, even though Harmanpreet Kaur and Smriti Mandhana had both written to the BCCI urging them to continue with him.
Powar then worked at the National Cricket Academy and with the India A sides, before taking over as the coach of Mumbai men’s team in February 2021. Under his charge, Mumbai turned their fortunes around to romp to the Vijay Hazare Trophy (50-overs domestic competition) title.
Under Raman, India reached the final of the T20 World Cup in 2020, losing to Australia on March 8. With the pandemic striking worldwide almost immediately after, the team didn’t play another international match until their home series against South Africa Women that began on March 7 earlier this year. South Africa won the ODIs 4-1, and the T20Is 2-1.
Source: ESPN Crickinfo