Pickleball Magazine 5-2 WD | Page 60

Around the World PICKLEBALL ARRIVES IN KOLKATA O By George Dwyer USAPA MEMBER n Sunday, January 5, pickleball rolled into Kolkata, India, for the first time in recorded history. Ever since the Mumbai-based All India Pickleball Association was launched in 2007, pickleball in India has spread rapidly. A national open tournament is now held each year in January, and the level of play is climbing steadily. But, until this year, pickleball had never been seen in one of the nation’s most populous cities—Kolkata. In Kolkata, cricket eclipses all other sports in popular appeal. British colonizers introduced it in the 18th century, when the city was still known as Calcutta, and the game’s hold on the city has never let go. Football (soccer) is the city’s second favorite sport. But for all its popularity, football shares one important drawback with cricket. Staging a match in either sport requires a large playing field and dozens of willing participants, neither of which are easy to organize in this very crowded city. While limited space suppresses opportunities for play, so too does the city’s weather. Kolkata experiences only a brief window of relief in December/January before temperatures turn sweltering. By 56 February, asphalt becomes mushy underfoot, and the city’s sidewalks begin to buckle. Combined with ferocious humidity and often atrocious air quality, the disincentives for outdoor sports play are ample. In July and August, pounding monsoon rains arrive, cooling things off but flooding much of the city. So, throughout most of the year, most Kolkata’s sports enthusiasts sustain their interest through indoor games, particularly badminton and table tennis. Since the dimensions of a badminton court are nearly identical to those of a pickleball court, and indoor courts are plentiful in Kolkata, it occurred to me that the city might be ripe for a formal acquaintance with pickleball. I was determined to find out. Fortunately, I am married to a native Kolkatan. Krishna Roy came to the United States in 1977 to attend graduate school, then settled in the Washington, D.C., area. We met in 1985, married in 1989, and have been visiting Kolkata nearly every year since. On our most recent trip, in December 2019, I packed a net, some paddles, and bunch of pickleballs. Once on the ground, Krishna reached out to her formidable TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL 888.308.3720 OR GO TO THEPICKLEBALLMAG.COM network of old friends, and before long we secured a commitment from the Dalhousie Institute, a well- appointed sporting and social club. I met with Samir Doshi, Dalhousie’s director of sporting activities, and explained that we were hoping to stage a demonstration, introducing a “new” sport. He informed us that the club had a badminton pavilion, and courts with boundary lines already in place. We were welcome to use it. All we needed to do was throw up a net and tape down a couple of NVZ lines. Samir’s deputy, Saba Ali Firoz, would host us. She turned out to be a ferociously competitive high-level badminton player, and an open- minded, all-around sportswoman. Our exhibition would take place following a basketball camp for 50 teenagers, and Saba would hold them back to be our core audience. Perfect. After that, everything broke our way. For example, Kolkatans love food to an extraordinary degree. They rhapsodize over their sweets and enter the zone of ecstasy when the subject is fish. So, when our demonstration began with reference to “the kitchen,” we