For an ordinary cricketer, battling unbearable stomach cramps could well mean retiring to the cooler confines of the dressing room but if it is Harmanpreet Kaur, she would just hit eight sixes in order to avoid running.
Known for her penchant to raise the bar on the biggest platforms, the skipper smashed her way to an unbeaten 103 off 51 balls in India's comfortable 34-run win against New Zealand in the opening game of the ICC World T20.
"Yesterday, I was having little a bit back problem," Kaur said after the match. "In the morning, I was not feeling well, when I came to the ground I was feeling a little low and getting some cramps."
Harmanpreet Kaur got the @WorldT20 off to a RAPID start with a sensational display of hitting in Guyana. Here are her biggest and best shots, delivered by @Oppo #FlashCharge. pic.twitter.com/KOSrNbDGOJ
— ICC (@ICC) November 10, 2018
The severe cramps hampered her running between the wickets as she came up with a different plan.
"When initially I was running twos, I got a little cramp, after that the physio gave me medicine, and it settled down a little," she said.
"Then I thought instead of running too much, if I could I get more big shots because if you run too much, you get more cramps. Then I told Jemi (Jemimah Rodrigues), 'if you give the strike to me, I can go for more big shots'," the skipper revealed.
Kaur, whose 171 against Australia in the ODI World Cup last year has become a stuff of legends, didn't know while batting that she had gone on to become the first T20 centurion from the country.
"I was not looking at how many runs I was getting, I was looking at how many we needed to win the game," Kaur said.
"We knew that they have really good batsmen, they have Sophie Devine and [Suzie] Bates, we knew that if we scored just 150, we may not (win the game)."
Kaur felt that it was a good batting track where a set batswoman could score big.
"I knew it was a good batting track, if I settle down, I can get the runs, that's what I was thinking."
Her big-hitting prowess keeps bowlers all around the world on tenterhooks but the Indian skipper is hopeful that there might just be bigger and better things to come.
"Yes, why not? Because every day is a learning day, today I learnt a lot."
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