If you think that means Baig is gearing up for a post-playing career in broadcasting, think again.”I have a degree and I will study more because my future plans are to go into coaching,” she says. “I would love to coach women. And I would also like to build facilities in my area, in Gilgit. There are a lot of things that need to be fixed. You need a proper plan for that area.”That plan may even include education about women’s empowerment, which Baig identifies as crucial to the people in the Gilgit-Baltistan region.”In the area I come from, you need support, and if your parents are not supportive, you can’t do anything. You can’t even study if they are not supportive.”My parents are – alhumdulilah – very supportive. Whenever I think about my journey, I always think about my father, how he encouraged me. He was always excited for my success and wanted me to push hard always.”It was Baig’s father who gave her the name Diana, an uncommon name for a Muslim girl in Pakistan. “I was born in 1995. At that time Lady Diana [Spencer, Princess of Wales] was very popular. My father liked the name, so that’s the name he gave me.”It’s just one of the things that make her stand out in Pakistan. “I also have a different haircut, so a lot of people recognise me,” she says, patting her shoulder-length locks, shorter than most of her team-mates wear their hair. “People do know who we are, because people care about cricket.”Luckily, she doesn’t get recognised on the streets to the point where it has become stifling. She still gets to go out and do the things she loves, like hitting Joyland, an amusement park in Lahore, to “ride the same rides again and again”, or going home, to remind herself of where she’s from and how far she has come.”I go for trips and to get a break when I can. I just love the mountains. It’s my home. And still, I am the only international cricketer to come from that area – man or woman – and I am proud of that.”

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