Here’s a deep‑dive into the inspiring journey of the India women’s national cricket team—spotlighting their standout players, career‑defining records, and the meteoric rise of women’s cricket in India.
India’s maiden ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup win in November 2025 marked a watershed moment. The final, played at DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai, ended in a 52‑run victory over South Africa—298/7 vs 246—for that elusive first World Cup crown. The match captivated over 35,000 fans and became arguably the most‑viewed women’s cricket match ever in India. (thetimes.com)
That final night wasn’t just about the title—it broke records. Smriti Mandhana set a new benchmark for the most runs in a single World Cup edition, scoring 434 at an impressive average. (icc-cricket.com) Shafali Verma dazzled with 87 off 79 balls—the highest opening knock by an Indian in a final. (icc-cricket.com) Deepti Sharma produced a rare all‑round performance: over 200 runs plus 20 wickets, becoming the first cricketer (male or female) to do so in a single World Cup. (icc-cricket.com)
“This wasn’t just a win—it was validation. Women in blue finally stood at the summit, backed by talent, resilience, and a nation’s belief.”
In a semifinal showdown against defending champions Australia, India achieved the highest successful chase in women’s ODI history—339 runs. Jemimah Rodrigues anchored this surreal chase with an unbeaten 127, partnered by a bristling 167‑run stand with skipper Harmanpreet Kaur (89). The win ended Australia’s 15‑match World Cup dominance and punched India’s ticket to the final. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
Complementing that, India’s total score of 298 in the final ranks as the second‑highest in a Women’s World Cup final. (icc-cricket.com)
Reviewing all of 2025, India played 23 ODIs—securing 15 wins, 7 losses, and 1 no‑result—a commendable win percentage hovering around 65‑percent. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
Smriti Mandhana delivered one of the most dominant batting years by any Indian. In those ODIs, she amassed approximately 1,362 runs at an average near 62 and an aggressive strike rate nearing 110, including five centuries and five half‑centuries. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com) In World Cup play, she scored 434 runs, finishing among the top run‑scorers. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com) She also broke the Indian fastest ODI century record—reaching 100 off just 50 balls, overtaking Virat Kohli’s previous 52‑ball mark. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
Her international tally crossed the 5,000‑run mark in women’s ODIs, joining an elite group and matching Australia’s Meg Lanning with 17 centuries apiece. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
Deepti Sharma’s rise in 2025 was nothing short of extraordinary. In the World Cup, she became the first player (across genders) to score more than 200 runs and take over 20 wickets in a single edition. (icc-cricket.com) In addition, she emerged as India’s highest wicket‑taker in Women’s World Cup history. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
Her performance in the final—58* with the bat and 5/39 with the ball—earned her Player of the Tournament honors. (icc-cricket.com)
As of late 2025, the India women’s national cricket team features:
Overall, India’s women have reached the ODI World Cup final thrice—2005, 2017, and triumphantly in 2025. They’ve secured four ODI Asia Cup titles (2004, 2005‑06, 2006, 2008), three T20I Asia Cups (2012, 2016, 2022), T20 World Cup finals in 2020, plus Asian Games gold (2022) and Commonwealth silver (2022). (en.wikipedia.org)
Talent pipelines are strengthening too. Vaishnavi Sharma—a young all‑rounder—turned heads in the WPL debut after going unsold in the auction but being picked as a replacement. She dismissed Shafali Verma with her third delivery and rose fast through U‑19 success into national contention. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
Initiatives like the “WPL Speed Queen” are spotlighting raw pace talent across 15+ cities, nurturing future pace spearheads. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
India’s women’s cricket team has come of age. The 2025 World Cup win closed a decades‑long gap in global glory. Led by all‑round brilliance, dynamic batting, and strategic leadership, India stamped its authority across formats. With depth across batting (Mandhana, Verma, Rodrigues) and bowling (Sharma, others rising), the future gleams brighter.
Next strategies? Sustain talent pipelines, build on grassroots momentum, and translate ODI success into consistent T20 and Test performance. The foundation is strong, the ambition clear—and India’s women are ready for more.
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