India suffers narrow 4-run defeat to England in Women’s World Cup
India’s chase fell short by four runs against England in the Women’s World Cup. Despite half-centuries from Mandhana, Kaur, and Deepti Sharma, India failed to finish strong, leaving them in a do-or-die situation for the next two games
Published Date - 19 October 2025, 11:22 PM
Indore: India squandered a position of control to mess up their chase and suffered a four-run defeat against England, their third on the trot, in the Women’s World Cup here on Sunday.
Chasing 289 to win, India were cruising to victory but lost crucial wickets despite fifties from senior players Smriti Mandhana (88), Harmanpreet Kaur (70), and Deepti Sharma (50).
From needing 55 runs from 53 balls, India found themselves needing 14 from the last over with England holding their nerve as Sneh Rana and Amanjot Kaur failed to take the hosts across the line.
This was after seasoned off-spinner Deepti (4/51) produced a standout spell, helping restrict England to 288 for 8, built on the back of Heather Knight’s (109) splendid century.
India now need to win their remaining two games to seal the last semifinal spot as England became the third team to move to the last four with the win here.
Mandhana first put up a crucial 125-run stand with skipper Kaur before joining forces with Deepti in a 67-run partnership. Once she was out, Deepti took over with a fifty of her own, but just as it looked like she would go till the end, she threw away her wicket, and England also got rid of the dangerous Richa Ghosh.
It was Mandhana’s second consecutive half-century, a patient, hard-fought one, while Kaur, who had been out of touch through much of the competition, rediscovered her spark in trademark fashion, crafting a run-a-ball 70 that exuded intent and authority.
Mandhana, who started her innings in an edgy fashion, nearly dragging one onto her stumps, weathered a scratchy start and even battled cramps but showed immense concentration and composure in her 94-ball innings.
After Pratika Rawal’s early dismissal, Harleen Deol (24) assumed the role of aggressor, allowing Mandhana time to settle. Her first boundary only arrived in the 14th over, but once she found her rhythm, she became increasingly fluent.
Together, Mandhana and Kaur batted smartly, rotating strike, building pressure on England’s bowlers, and rescuing India from an uncomfortable position. At the halfway stage of the innings, India needed 164 from 150 balls.
Both targeted world No. 1 spinner Sophie Ecclestone with intent, striking her for boundaries at crucial intervals.
Kaur, in particular, targeted her counterpart Nat Sciver-Brunt, dispatching her for five fours. But the English captain bowled a back-of-a-length delivery outside off to have Kaur caught by Emma Lamb.
Earlier, playing her 300th international game, Knight’s (109) sweeping prowess was on full display as she laced her 91-ball innings with 15 boundaries and a six to get her third ODI ton and highest-ever score in WODIs.
For India, the dependable Deepti was the standout bowler, with captain Kaur relying on her seasoned off-spinner whenever India were in search of a breakthrough.
Interestingly, the skipper chose to hold back Deepti until the 16th over. Deepti brought up her 150th scalp by bamboozling Tammy Beaumont (22) before accounting for half-centurion Amy Jones (56).
She also helped trigger a mini batting collapse at the fag end of the innings, getting rid of Emma Lamb (11) and Alice Capsey (2).
Former skipper Knight rotated strike brilliantly, stitching a 113-run stand off 106 deliveries with skipper Nat Sciver-Brunt (38), which did significant damage to India. The duo found boundaries with ease, setting England up for a solid total.
This was after openers Jones (56 off 68 balls) and Beaumont successfully navigated the first 10 overs for the first time this tournament, stitching a 77-run opening stand.
But once left-arm spinner Sree Charani (2/68) had Sciver-Brunt out against the run of play, with Harmanpreet plucking the ball over her head with a well-timed leap, England’s batting crumbled under pressure.
To add to their woes, Knight was run out thanks to Sneh Rana’s accurate throw in the 45th over.
From there on, India were all over England, whose middle-order frailties were exposed once again as they lost 5 wickets for 39 runs