Tishmeet Kaur: Shooting Hoops, Chasing Dreams

What You’ll Read:

  • How a Ludhiana teenager is turning heads in Indian basketball
  • Her breakout performance at the SABA U-16 tournament
  • Why she might be the face of India’s next-gen women hoopers

Tishmeet Kaur At A Glance

DetailInfo
NameTishmeet Kaur
Age15
HometownLudhiana, Punjab
SportBasketball (Girls’ U-16)
PositionGuard / All-round utility player
Key Achievement (2025)Qualified for Asian Championship with India U-16
Tournament HighlightStandout performance at SABA U-16 Zone Qualifiers
BackgroundDaughter of national-level boxer Pardeep Kaur
SchoolingClass XI student, balancing academics and training
What’s Next2025 FIBA U-16 Asia Championship in Malaysia

Every once in a while, a name pops up from a small town; not with a press release, but with pure performance. Right now, that name is Tishmeet Kaur, a 15-year-old baller from Ludhiana who just helped India’s U-16 girls’ team qualify for the FIBA Asian Championship.

It happened quietly in the Maldives. The SABA U-16 Zone Qualifiers don’t grab national headlines, but they should’ve. Because Tishmeet wasn’t just a squad member. She was a standout. She scored, she hustled, and she carried herself like she’d been there before. Against Sri Lanka, she dropped 18 points. Against Bangladesh, she was everywhere; defense, rebounds, fast breaks.

What’s more, she was the only North Indian girl on the team. That’s not just representation; that’s pressure. And she handled it with the kind of calm you usually see in much older players.

The Boxer’s Daughter

Tishmeet didn’t come through a fancy academy. Her mother, Pardeep Kaur, is a former national-level boxer. No surprise that her daughter knows how to fight, just on a different surface.

Her training happens early in the morning, on regular school courts. No frills. Just drills. She plays guard, but she does a bit of everything. Quick hands. Sharp decisions. Smart movement. You don’t coach instincts like that, they come from reps and heart.

What Comes Next?

In September, she’ll represent India at the Asian Championship in Malaysia. If her form holds, this could lead to camps, scholarships, and maybe even international league exposure.

But for now, she’s back in Ludhiana. Studying for her Class XI exams. Still training every morning. Still grounded.

Final Word

Tishmeet won’t be trending on Instagram today. No viral clips. No interviews. But if you care about Indian sport beyond the headlines, hers is the kind of story worth following.

She’s not chasing attention, she’s chasing the ball. And maybe that’s exactly what makes her India’s next basketball hope.

Let’s back her!

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