Indian women's cricket team Archives ⋆ The Teenager Today https://theteenagertoday.com/tag/indian-womens-cricket-team/ Loved by youth since 1963 Tue, 02 Jul 2024 10:02:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://theteenagertoday.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/cropped-the-teenager-today-favicon-32x32.png Indian women's cricket team Archives ⋆ The Teenager Today https://theteenagertoday.com/tag/indian-womens-cricket-team/ 32 32 Smriti Mandhana: India’s Cricketing Marvel https://theteenagertoday.com/smriti-mandhana-indias-cricketing-marvel/ Tue, 02 Jul 2024 10:02:08 +0000 https://theteenagertoday.com/?p=29092 With each stroke of the bat and every milestone achieved, Smriti Mandhana has etched her name in the annals of cricket.

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Smriti Mandhana holding a bat over her shoulder and smiling.

In the world of women’s cricket, Smriti Mandhana stands as a beacon of inspiration. With each stroke of the bat and every milestone achieved, she has etched her name in the annals of cricket. Her batting style, characterized by perfect timing and effortless power, has been revered by fans around the globe. Her journey from Sangli, a small village in Maharashtra, to becoming one of the world’s leading opening batters is a testament to her talent and dedication towards the sport.

Smriti was born on 18 July 1996, and was raised in a cricket-loving household. Inspired by her father’s tales of district-level cricket and her brother’s exploits on the field, Smriti’s fascination with the game bloomed. As her skill set expanded, so did her ambitions. While she dedicated herself to cricket, she also prioritized her education. She completed a Bachelor of Commerce degree from Chintamanrao College of Commerce, Sangli.

With rigorous practice and unyielding determination, at nine, Smriti made it to the Maharashtra Under-15 team, and by eleven, she was already playing for the Under-19s. In 2013, she etched her name in history by becoming the first Indian woman to score a double century (224 runs) in an Under-19 one-day game.

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Our Teenagers bring home Laurels https://theteenagertoday.com/our-teenagers-bring-home-laurels/ Fri, 10 Mar 2023 09:39:20 +0000 https://theteenagertoday.com/?p=24632 For the first time in the history of cricket, Indian women have their names inscribed on the winning trophy of an ICC tournament.

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Indian Under 19 women's cricket team

In 2007, when the inaugural ICC T20 World Cup tournament was to be played, India had hardly any credentials worth the name in the shortest version of the game. So a team under Mahendra Singh Dhoni was dispatched in which many star names were conspicuous by their absence. So no one would have grumbled even if the Indian team had returned without winning any of its matches. However, what followed is now history.

Matters have changed since those yesteryears and now the Indian men’s team is ranked among the best T20 teams in the world. In contrast, the Indian women’s cricket team has yet to inscribe its name on any of the ICC World Cups. The closest that it came to doing so was when under Mithali Raj the Indian team entered the final of the WODI but lost rather badly to the same English team that it had beaten a few days earlier.

The Under-19 inaugural T20 World Cup for the girls was to be played in South Africa in January 2023 and the timing of the tournament could not have been any better for the Indian girls. Although Virat Kohli gave the Indian team a motivational talk before the team’s departure, there were two major factors that turned out to be favourable for the Indian contingent.

Cover of the March 2023 issue of The Teenager Today featuring cricketer Shafali Varma and the U-19 Indian cricket team

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Harmanpreet Kaur: She’s got the winning instinct https://theteenagertoday.com/harmanpreet-kaur-shes-got-the-winning-instinct/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 06:02:33 +0000 https://theteenagertoday.com/?p=23895 Harmanpreet Kaur Bhullar marched into the Indian team a day before turning twenty, on 7 March 2009, in a ODI against Pakistan.

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Harmanpreet Kaur batting

While our men’s cricket team could not win the last Asia Cup, our women beat Sri Lanka to emerge as the Asian Champions. No wonder the Board of Control for Cricket in India had to rethink about the remuneration being extended to the ladies and bring it at par with their male counterparts. Under a changed leadership at the BCCI from Saurav Ganguly to Roger Binny, and in the women’s team from Mithali Raj to Harmanpreet Kaur, our women’s cricket team is destined to attain new heights.

The above statement is in no way meant to demean the forerunners. In fact, the age of Mithali Raj’s leadership did see the Indian women achieve what they had never achieved before while Saurav’s Board took a radical decision to set the ball rolling for a women’s IPL. However, the leadership of the Indian team will now have a different colour under Harmanpreet; Mithali was always a cool customer where the emotions were never as demonstrative as one can expect from the new leader. The softer side of Harmanpreet Kaur, however, could be seen in her tears when Jhulan Goswami played her last match for India.

Born at Moga in Punjab on 8 March 1989 to Harmandar Singh Bhullar and Satwinder Kaur, Harmanpreet Kaur Bhullar marched into the Indian team a day before turning twenty, on 7 March 2009, in a One Day International against Pakistan, and then made her T20 debut two months later against England.

Cover of the December 2022 issue of The Teenager Today featuring Indian women's cricket team captain Harmanpreet Kaur

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Smriti Mandhana: India’s lone credit earner https://theteenagertoday.com/smriti-mandhana-indias-lone-credit-earner/ Tue, 22 Mar 2022 04:53:32 +0000 https://theteenagertoday.com/?p=21615 Winning the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Award on being named ICC Women’s Cricketer of the Year, Smriti earned a rare double as she had won the award for the first time in 2018.

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Smriti Mandhana holding a cricket bat

The year 2021 has been bad for Indian cricket in more than one way. First, the Test Championship final ended in a disaster and when a team was expected to rewrite history in South Africa, although the beginning seemed to be auspicious but then it saw Indian men’s cricket at its abyss, at least in reference to its latest achievements and reputation. So bad was the team’s nosedive that a dejected Virat Kohli decided to give away his leadership. However, just like the last Olympics, it was the Indian women who put on some balm on the country’s injured cricket reputation.

It is after several years that there is no male Indian cricketer in the ICC’s list of ‘Cricketers of the Year’ for 2021 in any category. The lone Indian cricketer in the ICC list is Smriti Shriniwas Mandhana. Winning the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Award on being named as the ICC Women’s Cricketer of the Year, Smriti earned a rare double as she had won the award for the first time in 2018.

Smriti has not only exhibited her prowess with the bat in red and white ball cricket but even while playing with the pink ball in Australia at the Gold Coast, when she scored her maiden Test hundred. To add to her spoils of 2021, she scored a half century against England and in 22 Internationals she scored 855 runs at an average of 38.86.

Born on 18 July 1996 in Mumbai, the year 2013 saw a left-hander teenager make her international debut in white ball cricket but she surprised one and all in becoming the first Indian lady to score a double hundred in one day cricket.

Cover of the March 2022 issue of The Teenager Today

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Shafali Verma: Watch out for this youngster! https://theteenagertoday.com/shafali-verma-watch-out-for-this-youngster/ Fri, 28 Feb 2020 09:04:58 +0000 http://theteenagertoday.com/?p=15424 Brought up in a state where girls are seldom encouraged to participate in outdoor games, Shafali had to be passed off as a boy to start her cricketing career.

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Shafali Verma raising her helmet and bat

Here is a quiz question for all the cricket buffs. Who is India’s youngest cricketer to score an international half century? Give up. Well, here is a small hint — the name of the cricketer starts with the letter ‘S’. Most of you may have guessed it as Sachin Tendulkar and if you have done so, let me put it right and straight; you guessed it all wrong! The correct name is that of a woman cricketer or perhaps more correctly a girl cricketer named Shafali Verma.

Sachin Tendulkar was 16 years and 216 days when he became the youngest Indian cricketer to score an international half century on scoring 59 runs in a Test match against Pakistan in 1989. Thirty years later, Shafali Verma improved the record on two counts; she was only 15 years and 285 days when she scored 73 runs against the West Indies. She fell short by just 18 days in touching the international record of UAE’s Kavisha Egodage who was 15 years and 267 days when she had scored an unbeaten 57 against Malaysia in January 2019.

An international newspaper referred to Shafali as a ‘tomboy’. If she is actually one, then there is every reason for her to be one! Brought up in a state which is notorious for its alarming female ratio and where girls are seldom encouraged to participate in outdoor games, Shafali had to be passed off as a boy to start her cricketing career.

Born on 28 January 2003, Shafali made her international debut in a T20 match against South Africa at Surat on 24 September 2019. India won the match thanks to the bowling magic of Deepti Sharma (3 for 8) but it wasn’t a debut that Shafali would ever like to look back on as she faced just four balls and failed to open her international account. However, it did not take long for Shafali to prove her real mettle as in the very next series against the West Indies she did more than what was required to be adjudged as the Player of the Series and all that before having turned sweet sixteen.

The series against the West Indies was a warning to other cricketing nations that their bowlers were destined to face an Indian carnage in the near future. Smriti Mandhana of India has already established herself as a hard-hitter at the opening slot and already named as the ICC’s woman Player of the Year and now she has another hard-hitting teenager to give her company in the opening slot. The West Indies became the first team to suffer when in the very first T20 match Shafali scored 73 runs to outshine her senior partner Smriti who finished with an individual score of 67. In the process, the opening pair put up 143 runs for the first wicket which is a new Indian women’s T20I record. The Indian team went on to finish the innings with a score of 185 for 4 which is the highest-ever score put up against the West Indies in any T20I.

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Smriti Mandhana: A rising star of women’s cricket https://theteenagertoday.com/smriti-mandhana-a-rising-star-of-womens-cricket/ Fri, 26 Apr 2019 06:49:57 +0000 http://theteenagertoday.com/?p=13212 Smriti Mandhana was named ODI Player of the Year by the ICC; a never-before honour for any Indian woman.

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Smriti Mandhana

It was mainly in the 1970s that women’s cricket began to get noticed in India. It was in 1976 that the Indian women’s cricket team, under the leadership of Shantha Rangaswamy, beat their West Indian counterparts in Patna, and the very next year, the Indian skipper also became the first Indian woman to score a Test Century which she did against New Zealand and that too on foreign soil.

While Shantha Rangaswamy was lost in oblivion after her cricketing career another of her contemporaries, Diana Eduljee continues to be in the limelight. The left arm spinner being a part of the Indian Railways continued to participate actively and was also awarded the Padma Shri in 2002. In 2017, she was appointed to the BCCI administration panel by the Supreme Court of India and was largely instrumental in the temporary suspension of two Indian players who are purported to have made some unwarranted comments during a TV show.

Almost two decades after these stalwarts of Indian women’s cricket, Anjum Chopra once again rekindled the weakening flame of women’s cricket in India. While she continues to be heard by cricket fans as an able TV commentator she had the distinction of being the first Indian woman to get an international appointment when she worked with Cricket South Africa women’s team as a technical consultant in 2012-2013.

Now, that we are in the age of Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami, the former has definitely taken Indian women’s cricket to new heights with a runner-up position for our team in the World Cup. Already termed as the Woman Tendulkar, Mithali has an average of 51.00, in both, Tests and Women ODIs and over 37 in T20 Internationals. With more than 6,700 runs in her bag, she is the only lady to have scored more than 6,000 runs in WODIs and 2,000 runs in WT20 Internationals and the only woman cricketer to have played in more than 200 WODIs. The achievements of Jhulan Goswami ought to go along with Mithali as the former has the distinction of having bagged the maximum wickets in WODIs. In fact, March 2012 was a red letter period for Indian Women’s cricket when Mithali and Jhulam held the ICC’s top spot in batting and bowling at the same time.

With her swashbuckling batting style, Harmanpreet Kaur became the first Indian lady to play in the Australian Big Bash League only to be followed by a youngster named Smriti Mandhana. Smriti has started a new glorious chapter in the history of Indian Women’s cricket. In June 2018, the BCCI named Smriti as the Best Women’s International Cricketer and the correctness of the decision can be gauged from the fact that in December 2018, the International Cricket Council awarded Smriti Mandhana with the Rachael Heyhoe-Flint Award for the Best Female Cricketer of the Year. She was also named the ODI Player of the Year by the ICC at the same time; a never-before honour for any Indian woman.

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Jemimah Rodrigues: 17-year-old bleeds blue for India https://theteenagertoday.com/jemimah-rodrigues-17-year-old-bleeds-blue-for-india/ Fri, 27 Apr 2018 09:48:03 +0000 http://theteenagertoday.com/?p=10519 Simply put, Jemimah Rodrigues isn’t eccentric or flamboyant. She isn’t your normal 17-year-old Bandra (Mumbai) girl either. She comes across as timid, but that’s without a bat in her hand. She’s a nightmare to bowlers and a bore to wicketkeepers (because she seldom misses a shot).

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Jemimah Rodrigues

When 17-year-old Jemimah Rodrigues, representing Mumbai in the U-19 West Zone inter-zonal One Day against Saurashtra slammed an unbeaten 163-ball 202 in November last year, she probably knew that the India Cap was coming sooner rather than later.

For years, women’s cricket suffered from the lack of new faces. There’s always been veteran batswoman Mithali Raj, pacer Jhulan Goswami and then there’s T20 skipper Hermanpreet Kaur. While they’re great players, sport, in order to thrive, needs new players (re: characters).

Jemimah Rodrigues batting vs AustraliaSimply put, Jemimah isn’t eccentric or flamboyant. She isn’t your normal 17-year-old Bandra (Mumbai) girl either. She comes across as timid, but that’s without a bat in her hand. She’s a nightmare to bowlers and a bore to wicketkeepers (because she seldom misses a shot).

Jemimah debuted for India against South Africa in February this year, and though she didn’t have an overtly great series, the selectors knew that their choice was going to reap huge benefits in the long run. And they didn’t have to wait a lot. Against Australia in the ODI series in Vadodara, Jemimah, who opened the innings for the country for the first time, scored a solid 55-ball 42 and suddenly everyone hailed her as a replacement to Mithali.

In the T20 tri-series against Australia and England at the Brabourne Stadium in March, Jemimah showed her capabilities, even notching up her first international half century. But she remained humble, especially when comparisons were drawn between her and Mithali.

“She (Mithali) is very positive while batting. It’s fun to bat with her and we had a good time while batting. She guides me, telling me to go after which bowler and against which bowler we should take singles. It’s really fun to bat with her. She is my role model and of course, it was a good learning experience for me,” Jemimah said, completely ignoring the comparisons. When prodded further, she said, “You cannot, just cannot compare me with her. I’m nowhere near her,” that’s all that she said.

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