“Cricket was where I got serious. I hated losing,” Deshapande said as he shared the story of his cricketing life.
Written by: Tejas Rao
Dhruv Deshpande, a sophomore at UW-Madison studying Computer Science and Economics, decided to not let go of his childhood talent and dream after coming to university. “I always wanted to play cricket, even if it meant semi-professionally, and that’s what led me to the BCC,” he said.
The Badger Cricket Club (BCC), founded in 2023, was the main spot for cricketing enthusiasts in UW-Madison to come show off their talent. It was also the only ticket to making an official university team that goes out and plays tournaments. Deshpande did not hesitate to find out the cricketing opportunities he had and joined the club just weeks after reaching Madison.
Even though he missed out on the first round of try-outs to make the team in the first semester at Madison, his performance in the weekly indoor tennis ball sessions – that were open to anyone – caught the eye of the seniors in the main team. “Most people came to play for fun, but Dhruv was clearly more invested and looked good out on the floor. So we decided to add him to our main squad,” BCC president Ayush Mehta said.
By his second semester as a freshman, he was playing with the official leather ball that cricket is played with professionally and in just a month he had proved his worth to be in the travelling squad to his first-ever rivalry tournament — a tri-series matchup between the BCC and the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities cricket club.
Over the three matches in his first-ever regional tournament, he took a total of 5 wickets in 9 overs bowled, and showed that putting him on the field as a bowler would guarantee the team at least a wicket per game. “He is definitely an asset and I’m sure we made the right decision adding him to our squad,” Mehta said post-tournament.
“I was definitely excited to make that starting eleven, but I know from my end that it took months of work to show my worth to a team of seniors and juniors that have been here for years,” Deshpande admitted.
As a child, he was always yearning to play. Unless the sky got dark or school work was hindering him, you’d always find him out in the field practicing. “He was almost never to be seen if it was a weekend or holiday,” his father, Guru Deshpande, exclaimed. “Only came in for meals or if cricket matches were playing on the T.V.”
In his schooling years, the highest level he achieved was playing at an intra state-level called ‘zonals’, representing his district throughout middle school. “Playing zonals was some of the best days playing cricket and the aim was always to make it to a state level.” When asked about his mindset, even at a young age, he said, “I of course played other sports but it didn’t matter that much to me if I lost. Cricket was where I got serious. I hated losing.”
Fast forward just 3 years and he made his dream a reality, ready to come out onto the field to face the other cricket clubs of mid-west universities. The Collegiate Cricket League’s (CCL) Regionals in October of this year was where he got his first taste of playing for a big trophy and a qualification to the CCL nationals.
Although the Badger Cricket Club lost their first match of the tournament, they bounced back with two wins to make the semi-finals against the University of Michigan. As they hit boundaries after boundaries, the Badgers needed to break their momentum by getting crucial wickets and getting their good batsmen out. Deshpande was having a decent tournament performance so far, getting wickets in previous matches consistently, but he found his moment to shine in this match.
As he stepped up to bowl his first over of the match, he got two wickets in the same over, getting the high-rated Michigan batsmen out early into the game. No doubt a crucial cog in the entire BCC machine, he went on to bowl extremely well in the finals against Ohio State and kept their batsmen at bay.
He had done it. “Losing the first match, we never thought we would win the regionals,” Deshpande said.
Winning the regional championship for his club and his university and getting that golden qualification ticket to the CCL Nationals coming up in March of 2026. “I never felt anything like it so I didn’t really know how to react but I knew that this was something I wanted to keep doing.”
The journey to a national-level tournament was completed and a new one began in that instant — winning his first-ever national trophy was the ultimate prize now. “Winning the regionals felt good since this team hasn’t won in a couple years, but I wasn’t fully satisfied with it. The nationals is something I feel would complete the feeling of winning.”