“A lot of people think franchise cricket is all about money. I don’t think like that. I have learnt a lot of things from franchise cricket,” she said. “I can share the same dressing room with the youngsters and the top players. So, we can learn how they can prepare for the games, how they prepare from training, and how they manage themselves in the dressing room.”I learn a lot of things from Sophie Devine, Beth Mooney, Harman [Harmanpreet Kaur]. There are different characters, different players, they know how to manage themselves in the middle, how they manage the pressure, how they handle the other players.”Franchise cricket has developed women’s cricket around the world and now we can see players score more runs. Even the team scores have gone a little bit higher. In the Asia Cup, we saw India score 165 and we chased that. Now players play different shots, there are different strategies because we learn from different coaches. These are the positive things I have learned from franchise cricket.”The next step is to push for a homegrown league in Sri Lanka, which Athapaththu says is in the works. “We are planning to play T10 league in December. It is on our calendar and next year we are also trying to organise a T20 league in Sri Lanka as well. My team-mates need exposure playing franchise leagues. If we play more games, we can develop our cricket, I know that.”Athapaththu has been around in the international scene for close to 15 years now, but at 34 knows she is close to the end of her career. As a batter, she has achieved accolades aplenty but as a captain, there are a few targets. One multi-tournament trophy in the form of the Asia Cup is in the bag. A T20 World Cup title could be the cherry on top.

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