"I once said to a player's father, 'uncle, there's women's cricket, please let her play'. He would retort back with, 'What is the financial security? Even if you win, what will you get and who would recognise you'?"
"I saw this myself as had two-three friends who played really well. But their parents never supported them and their careers got over at the college level. The dreams they had, if they had got that bit of support, they could have been fulfilled," she recounts to IANS.
Cut to now, and Reema sees immense hope, career as well as financial wise, for a female to have a bright future as a woman cricketer in India. "Through WPL, now a parent will feel that if their girl wants to be a cricketer, let them be free and play the game. WPL is bringing in ads, publicity, money and other players apart from Smriti, Harman, Mithali, Jhulan will be household names."