This was a dream that had been building for 112 years. In 1913, Australia-born schoolteacher Anne Kelleve had made cricket compulsory for girls at a school in Kerala. More than a century later, an Indian women’s team defeated the giants of the modern game to become world champions.
The World Cup was not a smooth march to glory. It was a tournament that tested India repeatedly before transforming them.
There were moments when the campaign appeared to be slipping away. Three successive defeats in the middle phase had sharpened criticism and revived familiar doubts around India’s ability to handle pressure on the global stage.
Then came the semifinal against Australia at the DY Patil Stadium, a night that changed everything.
Chasing 339 against the seven-time champions, India were wobbling at 59/2 when Harmanpreet Kaur walked out to bat. The roar inside the stadium “was not just a sound; it was a physical weight, a 30,000-strong collective breath of hopes and expectations.”
Harmanpreet’s presence calmed the chaos. She battled cramps and pressure to produce a stirring 89, but the defining innings belonged to Jemimah Rodrigues.
Dropped earlier in the tournament, the Mumbai batter returned to script one of the greatest knocks in Women’s World Cup history, an unbeaten 127 that carried India to the highest successful chase in Women’s World Cup knockout history.
But India’s triumph was never about one player.
Smriti Mandhana anchored the batting lineup with elegance and consistency. Harleen Deol stabilised innings in pressure situations. Pratika Rawal emerged as one of the breakout stars of the tournament. Deepti Sharma and Amanjot Kaur delivered crucial all-round performances. Across the squad, India kept discovering contributors when it mattered most.
At the centre of it all stood Harmanpreet Kaur: the emotional heartbeat of Indian women’s cricket.
When India stumbled during the group stage, it was her leadership that steadied the campaign. The transformation thereafter was seismic. It transformed the campaign from a nervous breakdown into an inspiring comeback.
Behind the scenes, head coach Amol Muzumdar had quietly built a side that refused to let setbacks define them.
Muzumdar’s own life carried the weight of unfinished dreams. One of India’s greatest domestic batters never to play international cricket, he accumulated 11,167 first-class runs before retiring without an India cap. Yet in Navi Mumbai, he stood as the coach who guided India to its greatest triumph in women’s cricket.
At a packed stadium in Navi Mumbai, chants of “India! India!” echoed through the night. AR Rahman’s Jai Ho blared across the venue. Families cried in the stands. Young girls watched women cricketers occupy the centre of India’s sporting imagination like never before.
For Shafali Verma, the night felt almost cinematic. In 2013, as a nine-year-old in Lahli, she had forced her father to take her to watch Sachin Tendulkar play his final first-class match. Sitting on her father’s shoulders, she had screamed “Sachiiin! Sachiiin!” from the stands.
Twelve years later, Tendulkar sat in the stands watching Shafali help India win a World Cup in his backyard. Life came full circle for Shafali.
The BCCI announced a record Rs 51 crore reward after the triumph. Administrators called it a watershed moment for Indian sport. Prize money rose. Visibility rose. More importantly, belief rose.