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India Women's most memorable ODI wins this century

India pulled off the highest-ever successful chase in women's ODI history to end Australia's 15-match winning streak at the World Cup and booked themselves a place in the final against South Africa, thus ensuring a new champion in the format. The stunning victory against the favourites ranks among India's most memorable triumphs in women's ODIs. Here are the standout victories that define their rise this century.

India beat New Zealand by 40 runs

2nd semi-final, Potchefstroom, World Cup 2005
India stormed into their maiden World Cup final with a convincing 40-run win, knocking out defending champions New Zealand. Asked to bat first, India were rocked by two early wickets before Anjum Chopra and captain Mithali Raj steadied the innings through a 66-run stand. After Chopra's fall, Raj continued undaunted and led India to 204 for 6 with an unbeaten 91.

New Zealand's chase unravelled swiftly. They lost two wickets for just 13 runs before Nooshin Al Khader struck twice in her very first over to deepen the crisis. Despite Maria Fahey's fighting 73, India's bowlers kept their discipline to script a historic entry into the final.

India beat Australia by 36 runs

2nd semi-final, Derby, World Cup 2017
A rain-reduced semi-final. A Harmanpreet Kaur hurricane. A performance that transformed women's cricket in India. In a 42-over contest, Harmanpreet's unbeaten 171 off 115 balls was pure theatre - measured at first, monstrous later. She walked in at 35 for 2 and walked out with Australia shell-shocked. Her first fifty took 64 balls, the next two came in just 43 combined. India ended at 281 for 4; Harmanpreet had single-handedly redrawn the boundaries of what was possible.

Australia's response was spirited. Elyse Villani's fluent 75 gave them hope before a collapse saw them lose 6 for 43. Alex Blackwell's late charge threatened a miracle, but Deepti Sharma bowled her for 90 off 56. The win sent India into the final at Lord's and inspired a generation back home.

India beat England by 1 wicket

1st ODI, Nagpur, 2018
The first meeting between India and England since their thrilling 2017 World Cup final ended in another nail-biter. England, batting first, slipped from 71 for 0 to 124 for 6 before Fran Wilson (45) and Danielle Hazell (33) took them to 207. Smriti Mandhana's 86 set up India's chase beautifully at 166 for 3, but a middle-order collapse left them teetering at 190 for 9.

It took an unbroken last-wicket stand of 18 between Ekta Bisht and Poonam Yadav to steer India home with five balls to spare, sealing a thrilling win for the World Cup runners-up over the reigning champions.

India beat Australia by 2 wickets

3rd ODI, MacKay, 2021
Big runs, baffling drops, bold catches, missed run-outs, a collapse, a front-foot no-ball ruling out a wicket, and… a record chase. India had come agonisingly close to snapping Australia's record winning streak in the previous match, but faltered at the finish. This time, they held their nerve.

Batting first, Australia rode on half-centuries from Ashleigh Gardner and Beth Mooney, plus a rapid 32-ball 47 from Tahlia McGrath, to post 264 for 9. In reply, Shafali Verma and Yastika Bhatia's century stand powered India to 160 for 1 inside 30 overs. A fightback from Australia reduced India to 208 for 6, and the tension deepened when the equation came down to four runs off the final over with two wickets in hand. Jhulan Goswami's lofted drive off Nicola Carey finally broke Australia's 26-match streak - a moment to savour for the veteran.

India beat England by 16 runs

3rd ODI, Lord's, 2022
India's first ODI series win in England since 1999 led to tears on both sides - the Indians over the end of Goswami's exemplary two-decade career and Charlie Dean at the thought of taking her side so close only to be undone in this way. The anticlimactic finish occurred in the 44th over, when running in to bowl the fourth ball, Deepti noticed Dean backing up too far at the non-strikers' end and ran her out to claim the final wicket.

Earlier, fifties from Mandhana and Deepti had taken India to 169 after being reduced to 29 for 4 inside the first hour. In reply, England were four down inside 12 overs and writing was on the wall at 65 for 7. Dean stitched partnerships of 38, 15, and 35 with the remaining batters but she was caught short with England 16 adrift.

India beat South Africa by 4 runs

2nd ODI, Bengaluru, 2024
Four centuries - a first in a women's ODI - and 646 runs in total. The game had everything, and it ended with a last-ball finish that went India's way. Asked to bat first, India piled up their third-highest ODI total - 325 for 3 - with Mandhana and Harmanpreet smashing 136 and 103 not out respectively. South Africa, reduced to 67 for 3, seemed out of the contest until Laura Wolvaardt and Marizanne Kapp's 184-run partnership took the game deep.

It was down to ten required off the final over. Pooja Vastrakar conceded five off her first two balls and then struck twice in the next two. With five needed off the last delivery, Wolvaardt, finally back on strike, was deceived by a back-of-the-hand slower one.

India beat Australia by 5 wickets

2nd semi-final, DY Patil, World Cup 2025
India ended Australia's latest World Cup juggernaut by producing the highest successful chase in women's ODI history. Opting to bat, Australia were cruising towards 350, thanks to Phoebe Litchfield's exuberant maiden World Cup hundred, and half-centuries from Ellyse Perry and Ashleigh Gardner. But India's bowlers struck late, taking 8 for 118 to restrict them to 338.

India were 60 for 2 after the powerplay when Jemimah Rodrigues and Harmanpreet began a yin-yang partnership that saw the team finding the fence regularly. Once the captain fell, Rodrigues carried on to an epic unbeaten 127, supported by quickfire cameos from Deepti Sharma, Richa Ghosh, and Amanjot Kaur, to help India book their place in another World Cup final.