The Witch And Her Two Disciples -

Ultimate Cricket tracking and scoring app for all cricketers. Track and improve your game with the Vtrakit app right from your smartphone or tablet. Bring your game to the next level with Vtrakit!

Vtrakit is about helping Cricketers bring together their passion, practice and performance.

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About Vtrakit

An app built by cricket-lovers for cricket-lovers with the vision of enabling cricketers from all levels to enhance their game.

Vtrakit’s mobile-based app is designed to be user friendly so that anyone can start using it to score games, capture cricketing stats and practice sessions. You could be playing village Cricket, gully Cricket, club Cricket or professional Cricket - you can use Vtrakit to improve your performance, elevate your game and experience Cricket in a whole new way.

SNEAK PREVIEW

Capture and track to make YOUR Cricket count

Vtrakit App is full of unique features that you can explore to transform your cricketing experience. In addition to scoring games and keeping track of your Cricket stats, you can also connect to other players, capture your practice sessions and create tournaments. Watch the video to get a sneak preview of the Vtrakit App.

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App Features

Why Vtrakit?

Score Games - On/Offline

Live capture ball-by-ball score of your match with the Vtrakit App & download your scorecard in PDF

Tournaments

Organize tournaments, schedule matches, see tournament stats, points table and much more

Transfer Scoring

Scoring no longer has to fall to one person, transfer scoring to another user during a match within seconds

Pitch Map and Wagon Wheel

Relive your shots and deliveries with Pitch Map and Wagon Wheel

Capture your Practice hours

Track all your practice hours (batting, bowling, fielding and wicket keeping) by capturing it

Capture your Fitness hours

You can log your fitness hours and see your progress in real-time.

Testimonials

Our users love us!

Krishanth Shanthikumar

Player

One of the best apps for cricket scoring. Recent updates make the app more valuable specially the offline scoring feature. Really loving the User experience and overall performance so far. Good luck to the team for future releases.

Vijay Jeyanthan

Player

Great scoring app. Like the community section where I can follow my favourite local cricketers. League organisers would love the tournament section.

Rohith Fernandes

Player

Simply simple, yet brilliant!! Came across this app by chance and am totally amazed at the features on it. Great job you guys! Keep rocking.. PS: The scoring system in the app is my fav! Damn cool stuff!

Don Thomas

Coach

A Masterpiece. This app is exceptionally good. If you love cricket, you'll definitely love this app. I have been waiting for a proper cricket scoring app for many years. and this fulfilled my wishes in every way possible.

Shivangi Gupta

Cricket Lover

This is a one stop destination for any cricket lover out there, it's got an easy to use UI, amazing features and overall an enhanced cricketing experience. My personal favorite is how it allows you to capture your practice sessions and witness your growth, pushing you to do better everyday!

Sajad Sakeer

Player

Really GREAT Cricket scoring app ever seen, It is fascinating to do scoring using this app...ability to download scorecard in pdf format for every match is mindblowing. Kudos to the entire team.

The Witch And Her Two Disciples -

"Whatever happens," she told them on a day when the reeds were singing with migrating geese, "the craft is not an inheritance the way the lord’s fields are. It is a contract. You bind yourselves to the world, and the world binds you back. You must be ready to pay with your time, with your silence, with the small deaths that ask you to become less selfish." She pressed, briefly, a ring into Em’s hand—iron, knotted. "This is not mine," she said. "It has belonged to those who kept watch before me. Keep it until you weigh your own iron."

Years later, the village had a new rhythm. The children no longer feared the fen. They brought Mave’s old books—her recipes and lists, her rules, the small warnings she had written on the margins—and they pressed their figures into the inked drawings Em had made. The disciples were older now; Em’s hair silvered at the temples, Lior’s hands were knuckled but sure. They kept the jars neatly labeled and the lingering things respectfully in their places. the witch and her two disciples

The second, Em, arrived on a night when the moon was a coin; she came with an armful of charcoal sketches of things she refused to say aloud. Em’s silence was not absence—it was an archive. She had seen a thing and kept it folded in her ribs until she could look at it straight. With Mave she learned to read the language of moss and shadow, to draw sigils in the condensation on the inside of the kettle, to let the cottage tell secrets through the slow creak of joists. "Whatever happens," she told them on a day

On festival nights, when the village turned its lamps into constellations and hung strings of salted fish as offerings to whatever kept the tides—on those nights the two disciples would sit outside the cottage and talk about lessons Mave had left like seeds: the exact hour to collect dew, how to sew a seam so it took the shape of a story, how to refuse a wish that would hollow. They told tales of the lord’s wife who finally learned to plant, of the child whose cough left like a small bird. They told of failures, for those were the brittle honored things. You must be ready to pay with your

The witch’s rule, downloaded into their bones, became a village custom: that power is a loan and not a right; that to heal is to make room in the world, not to close it; that the smallest honesty can be stronger than the largest charm. And if a child asks, years from then, what a witch is, they will be told about a woman who kept her hands steady and taught two others how to keep theirs steady, too.

They grieved. They boiled the kettle until the steam made the windows weep. They bared their souls to the jars they had made together, finding the absence of her hands in every place they used to rest. The village came, tentative as frost, bringing shoes and onions and questions. Em drew the coming and going of each person in sharp graphite lines. Lior fed the sick and measured doses, and sometimes, at the edge of the night, he read from Mave’s old ledgers until the words tasted like lullabies.

"You could have given her a baby," Lior whispered later, starched indignation in his voice. "We could have. Why not?"