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globzette.com > Asia > Can India Finally Win the Women’s World Cup?
Asia

Can India Finally Win the Women’s World Cup?

Alex Carter
Last updated: January 28, 2026 10:39 am
Alex Carter
Published: October 2, 2025
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India’s women’s cricket team launched its India Women’s World Cup campaign with a confident 99-run win over Sri Lanka. Though the scoreline suggests dominance, the victory came with challenges.

Contents
  • What Does India Need to Improve?
  • How Has Women’s Cricket Evolved in India?
  • Is This India’s Best Chance Yet?
  • Can They Handle the Pressure?
  • Final Thoughts

Playing in Guwahati, India’s top order struggled, collapsing to 124-6 early in the innings. It took a resilient 103-run partnership between Deepti Sharma and Amanjot Kaur to stabilize the innings and push the score to a competitive 269. The total proved too steep for Sri Lanka, giving India a much-needed early win.

While the win brings points, it also raises concerns about the top-order’s consistency as India chases its first-ever World Cup title.

What Does India Need to Improve?

India’s top order, often considered its backbone, faltered under early pressure. Harmanpreet Kaur and her side will need to regroup before tougher opponents arrive. Australia, England, and South Africa present major hurdles.

Despite the win, cracks in batting depth and decision-making surfaced. With high expectations and home advantage, pressure will only increase as the tournament progresses. Here is the link to our article on the Indian Cricket Future.

How Has Women’s Cricket Evolved in India?

The rise of Indian women’s cricket has been slow but impactful. The sport gained momentum after 2006, when the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) formally integrated women’s cricket into its fold.

Legends like Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami paved the way with world-class performances. Now, players like Smriti Mandhana, Richa Ghosh, and Harmanpreet Kaur are the face of a new era.

Additionally, the Women’s Premier League (WPL) has opened doors for fresh talent and commercial visibility. It also signals a growing acceptance and support for women’s cricket in India.

Is This India’s Best Chance Yet?

India has come close before. They reached the 2017 ODI final and the 2020 T20 final but fell short both times. However, the current team blends experience with youthful energy, making this campaign especially promising.

The India Women’s World Cup also comes at a time when the team has recorded historic wins, like their first T20 series win in England. These victories have boosted morale and exposed players to high-pressure scenarios.

Facing Pakistan next, India holds a dominant record. However, the real test will come against Australia and England, two of the sport’s most consistent teams. Here is the link to our article on India Sports Update.

Can They Handle the Pressure?

Winning this title will require more than talent. India needs consistency, strong mental resolve, and tactical clarity.

Fitness levels, fielding standards, and strategic bowling choices will play a major role. Moreover, playing at home is both a blessing and a burden—crowd expectations can inspire or overwhelm.

Nonetheless, with strong leadership from Harmanpreet Kaur and depth in all departments, India stands a solid chance at rewriting history.

Final Thoughts

The road ahead in the India Women’s World Cup will be tough, but India has the resources and ambition to succeed. If they maintain momentum, stay injury-free, and improve their batting order’s reliability, this could be their breakthrough year.

Victory would not only be a cricketing milestone—it could transform the future of women’s sports in India forever.

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ByAlex Carter
Alex Carter is a distinguished Asia news authority renowned for comprehensive expertise across regional journalism, geopolitics, business, technology convergence, and socio-economic trends shaping South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the broader Indo-Pacific. Mastering domains like Indo-Pak relations, China’s Belt & Road Initiative, ASIAN economic dynamics, India’s startup ecosystem, regional cybersecurity threats, climate policy impacts, digital transformation in emerging markets, and cross-border trade disruptions, Alex delivers unmatched analysis. Through globzette.com, Alex Carter deeply researched reports, exclusive interviews with policymakers, and strategic forecasts covering every Asia news subcategory from Kashmir diplomacy and Myanmar conflicts to Singapore fintech. Serving 2M+ readers, including diplomats, executives, and analysts, his platform demystifies complex regional shifts with actionable intelligence. Keynoting at Asia Society forums and contributing to Nikkei Asia, Alex bridges data-driven reporting with geopolitical foresight.
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