It is rare for an uncapped player to get picked in an overseas T20 league, especially when they have not played in their own country's equivalent tournament. But Salonee Dangore did the improbable when she signed with Trinbago Knight Riders (TKR) for the 2025 Women's Caribbean Premier League (CPL).
A legspin-bowling allrounder, the 27-year-old Dangore is one of four overseas players at TKR alongside Lizelle Lee, Shikha Pandey and Jess Jonassen. For the last two WPL seasons, Dangore was a net bowler at Delhi Capitals, the franchise Pandey and Jonassen play for. It would not be a surprise if these two put in a word after watching her at close quarters.
Dangore's cricketing journey is as improbable as her CPL selection. Growing up, she was a national-level athlete and had no interest in cricket. Until 2015, she did not even know of legspin's existence.
"When I was in school, I used to run very fast," she tells ESPNcricinfo. "So our sports teacher asked me to pursue athletics. I would do 100m, 200m, long jump and triple jump. During my Under-14 and Under-17 days, I represented Madhya Pradesh at the national level in all those events."
She was around 17 when Jose Chacko, a Sports and Youth Welfare officer, advised her mother to make her switch to cricket for better opportunities. Dangore enrolled at an academy run by the former Ranji Trophy player Sunil Lahore in Indore. Since she had only watched boys in her residential colony bowl with long run-ups, she wanted to be a fast bowler. Lahore watched her bowl a couple of deliveries and told her to take up legspin.
After spending about two years at the academy, Dangore joined the Ramesh Bhatia Cricket Foundation (RBCF). As a track-and-field athlete, her fielding was top-notch, but she struggled to turn her legbreaks. That sounds incredible, because currently she can pitch it on middle and leg stump and consistently hit off.
"I was inspired by Shane Warne and the way he turned the ball," she says. "But my arm would rotate in the other direction and most of my deliveries would end up as googlies. So I would watch his videos in slow motion to figure out how he did it.
"Apart from that, my coaches - Sanjay Choubey sir and Himanshu Vairagi sir - at the RBCF helped in correcting my arm alignment. It took a lot of effort but eventually I was able to turn the ball."
Dangore made her debut for Madhya Pradesh in 2017-18. Two seasons later, she was their highest wicket-taker (14 in eight games, at an average of 11.50) and third-highest run-scorer (130 at 32.50) in the One-Day Trophy, before Covid-19 ended the tournament prematurely.
The turning point of her career came in 2022, when the Madhya Pradesh Cricket Association (MPCA) called up former India legspinner Narendra Hirwani for a camp. "He changed my mindset completely," Dangore says. "He said, 'You will do what you think you can. So you should think you are the best legspinner in the world.' That advice is still fresh in my mind and gives me a lot of confidence when I am bowling."
Shortly after that camp, the RBCF also invited Hirwani to their academy. Since then, Dangore has had multiple sessions with him.
"Sir also advised me to bowl slightly faster," she says. "So right now I am working on increasing my pace while maintaining the turn. Apart from that, I am working on my slider and googly."
When it comes to batting, Dangore's focus is on power-hitting and strike rotation, so that she can "contribute in every situation".
The stints with Capitals have also helped her immensely. "In my first year with them, there were only two net bowlers, [VJ] Joshitha and me," she says. "I used to bowl in the same set as Jess Jonassen and would ask her about my bowling, tactics, and what to bowl when. Whatever feedback I got, I worked on that."
Dangore also realised she needed to shoulder more responsibility for her domestic side to stand out. In search of better opportunities, she moved to Chhattisgarh before the 2024-25 season.
She picked up only two wickets in six games in the T20 Trophy, but emerged as Chhattisgarh's leading wicket-taker in the one-dayers with 15 scalps from six matches at an average of 12.00. With the bat, she was their second-highest run-getter with most of her 144 runs coming at No. 6.
That, in December 2024, remains Dangore's last competitive tournament. Since then, she has had another stint with Capitals and is eager to show off her learnings. But with the CPL allowing teams to field only three overseas players in their XI, will she get enough game time?
"I am not thinking about that because it's not in my control," she says. "Whenever I get a chance, I want to give my best. Moreover, the pitches there [in Guyana] should help spinners."
Dangore cites Shreyanka Patil's example. Patil too was uncapped when Guyana Amazon Warriors picked her in 2023, though unlike Dangore she had had a full WPL season behind her. She finished the CPL as the highest wicket-taker with nine wickets from five games.
"I want to create a similar impact," Dangore says. "Whenever the team needs me - be it with the ball or the bat - I want to win matches. I hope this stint opens up more doors for me."