Asked at the end of the England tour how she felt about the situation, she remained exasperated.”I don’t know, I don’t know actually,” Athapaththu said. “I’m not lucky enough. I think so because I play my best for my country and I played against the best teams in the world – against New Zealand, against England, against Australia. My best performance always against Australia, New Zealand, England, and India, so the top-four teams, and South Africa as well. The last [T20] World Cup, I scored 70 [68 against South Africa] in the opening game, [three days later] was the WPL auction but no one picked me.”And this year, same thing, after the New Zealand series and after the England T20 series – I’m the player of this series, but the WBBL will not pick me. So I can’t control these things. I just play my game. I enjoy every day in the middle because, number one, my priority is playing for my country so I just do my best for my country.”That’s not to say her ambition to play top-level franchise cricket consistently wasn’t bubbling away, barely beneath the surface.”Hopefully, fingers crossed,” she added. “It’s not dependent on my side. If they invite me, if they pick me, definitely I’ll come and play franchise cricket because I played a couple of years in the Kia Super League and Women’s Big Bash League, CPL, PSL exhibitions and Women’s T20 Challenge in India, but yeah, let’s see.”Earlier, at home against New Zealand in June, she scored two unbeaten centuries in Sri Lanka’s 2-1 ODI series triumph, their first bilateral series victory against the opposition. She also scored 80 not out off 47 balls in the final match of the T20I leg, which New Zealand won 2-1. She rose to the top of the ICC women’s ODI batting rankings in July and currently sits third, while she is seventh on the T20I rankings, having reached a career-high sixth in September.Chamari Athapaththu has had a dream run in international cricket in 2023•Getty ImagesIn explaining her dream run in international cricket for 2023, Athapaththu said: “I worked hard on the nets because last year I didn’t get any franchise cricket, so I worked on my nets and I want to play my best cricket for my country, that’s my dream. I want to prove to everyone I’m a really good player. I can only prove it to them in the middle, so I work on the nets and play my fearless game every time.”Initially overlooked in the overseas draft for the current WBBL, she was snapped up by Thunder as cover for the existing overseas contingent of Marizanne Kapp, Heather Knight and Lauren Bell. With Knight as captain, it took an illness to No. 1 draft pick Kapp to make way for Athapaththu initially. Bell played just twice for Thunder and was recalled by England ahead of their upcoming tour of India, by which time Athapaththu had made herself indispensable.She scored five fifties in the tournament this year and crashed 18 sixes, third behind Grace Harris and Sophie Devine. In doing so, she helped Thunder to a vastly improved performance after they recorded just one win last season.The knock-on effect so far has been another deal, Athapaththu signing for Northern Brave, with whom she will link up for New Zealand’s Super Smash late next month. With the auction for the 2024 WPL due to take place on December 9, she could be taking another significant step in her franchise career before long.

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