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Cricktake
Cricktake
Author: Hassan Ali, Sharankumar, Roopesh A.
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© 2025 Cricktake.
Description
Cricktake is a cricket podcast founded by supply chain students at Purdue, shaped by contributors living in cities as varied as Toronto, Dublin, Islamabad and Visakhapatnam. Each episode looks at the past, present and future of the game, mixing sharp analysis with fresh perspectives and honest conversation beyond scores and headlines.
8 Episodes
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Fifty years after the first Women’s World Cup, India are champions.This episode of Cricktake dives into the 2025 Women’s World Cup - the richest and most-watched edition ever. From Mandira Bedi’s sponsorship in 2005 to India’s record-breaking chase and South Africa’s fearless run, we explore the power shifts that redefined women’s cricket.00:00 – Intro: 50 years since 1975 and the most watched Women’s World Cup ever02:18 – Segment 1: In The Middle – Power shifts and turning points02:33 – South Africa’s journey: fearless, emotional and unbreakable16:05 – Australia’s journey: human this time but still formidable25:00 – India’s journey: historic, emotional and full of belief42:35 – England’s journey: underwhelming, senior heavy and looking for renewal45:05 – Pakistan’s journey: gritty, improving and finding rhythm47:00 – Sri Lanka and New Zealand: flashes of brilliance lost to rain47:55 – Segment 2: What’s Next – the future of women’s cricket and its new power map
Before the men lifted their first World Cup in 1975, the women had already done it in 1973. Yet that story was quietly forgotten.This episode of Cricktake revisits the rise, neglect, and revival of women’s cricket - from Rachael Heyhoe Flint’s pioneering World Cup to the WPL’s packed stadiums and Australia’s blueprint for professionalization. We explore how gender-bland sexism, selective memory, and structural bias shaped the sport’s past, and ask a simple question that still echoes today:When will women’s cricket truly be seen as equal and not exceptional?00:07 - Introduction: The story cricket forgot02:16 - Segment 1: The Forgotten Past - 1973, erasure, and the gendered narrative12:54 - Segment 2: The Present - WPL, visibility vs. equity, and lived realities30:28 - Segment 3: What’s Next - Australia’s blueprint, India’s breakout, and the global roadmap🎧 Listen, Read, Follow: https://ecosystem.cricktake.com/Available on Spotify, Amazon Music, Instagram, X, TikTok, Substack & Medium.
The Asia Cup 2025 reminded us how form, rhythm, and temperament define success in the subcontinent. India’s expected dominance was finally challenged by a late Pakistani surge, though not enough to shift the pundits’ predictions. Cricktake unwraps the tournament through its turning points, from Afghanistan’s struggle and Sri Lanka’s rise to the determined efforts of the UAE, Oman, and Hong Kong, revealing how structure and skill continue to shape Asian cricket’s story.
They were never on the team sheet but their voices shaped the game. From radio epics and velvet baritones to tactical dissections and chaotic one-liners, commentators have turned cricket into conversation. This episode of Cricktake charts the evolution of the mic, the masters who knew when to speak, the ones who didn’t, and the soundbites that became folklore. We break down the greats, the gimmicks, and the future of commentary in an age of AI and overload. And we ask the question most fans haven’t dared to voice. Who really deserves the mic today?
In an age of instant gratification and booming T20 leagues, is there still room for Test cricket, the format that defined the game? This episode of Cricktake explores the past, present, and uncertain future of the longest format. From five-day epics and Bazball experiments to collapsing boards and Gen Z apathy, we ask the question no one wants to answer: Is Test cricket dying or is it just evolving?
In June 2025, South Africa finally lifted the World Test Championship trophy, breaking decades of doubt and the weight of the “chokers” tag. This episode of Cricktake looks at how the Proteas’ victory rewrites their past, reshapes their present, and opens new questions about what comes next.
They came from different playbooks but collided on the same stage. One side was G² with Gill’s runs and Gambhir’s edge, the other driven by the bravado of Bazball. Across 25 days the first Anderson–Tendulkar Trophy gave us records, heartbreak and defiance, from Gill’s run-fest to Jadeja’s resilience, from England’s theatre to Siraj’s final roar. This episode of Cricktake relives the drama, unpacks the turning points and asks the question left hanging at The Oval. Who really won this 2–2?
After 18 long years, the wait is finally over. From flamboyant beginnings and near misses to heartbreaks that hardened into memes, RCB’s journey has defined the IPL in ways trophies never could. This episode of Cricktake traces the arc of a franchise that turned pain into cult, chaos into identity, and belief into silverware. We relive the stars, the scars, and the season that changed everything.











