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Goud times roll for India's newest new-ball star

Kranti Goud picked up 3 for 20 to continue her rapid rise with India's ODI side

Shashank Kishore
Shashank Kishore
05-Oct-2025 • 14 hrs ago
Kranti Goud, 22, was informed of her India debut at the R Premadasa Stadium in May 2025. She had largely been picked as an apprentice, with India waiting on two senior players - Renuka Singh and Pooja Vastrakar, both injured and in rehab.
It was an unremarkable debut, for figures of 5-0-22-0. But among the many things she did right was hitting Chamari Athapaththu, a ferocious puller of the cricket ball, on her ribs. That tiny moment, lost amid Smriti Mandhana's century and Sneh Rana's four-for, encouraged India's selectors to take a punt on her for the England tour.
When she picked up a six-for in Durham, hooping the ball and leaving England's top order gasping en route to an impressive series victory, it was fairly evident Goud had sealed her World Cup spot, irrespective of whether the injured senior pacers returned. Renuka has, Vastrakar hasn't, but Goud has made herself undroppable after just two outings.
A week after she opened the 2025 World Cup with 1 for 41 in India's win over Sri Lanka, Goud stung Pakistan's top order in a fiery new-ball spell. She finished with 3 for 20 in India's 88-run win in Colombo, one that her neighbourhood watched on a giant LED screen they'd installed back in Ghuwara, a town in rural Madhya Pradesh.
"The talk is about focusing on line and length only," Goud said after winning the Player-of-the-Match award. "I haven't thought of doing much extra. Variations like bouncer or slower balls, those depend on the situation. The coaches told me to pull my lengths back a little based on the conditions and surface, that's what I did."
It wasn't merely Goud listening to her coaches that did the trick. She also got the captain to give her the fields she wanted most times. In the 12th over, with the ball losing some of its shine, Harmanpreet Kaur pulled out Deepti Sharma from the slips, only for Goud to wheel her back to where she'd been.
The result? Aliya Riyaz was defeated by late movement to get a healthy edge through to Deepti at second slip. A jubilant Goud immediately turned to her captain, who ran towards her to acknowledge her contribution.
"The ball was swinging early on, I couldn't understand what was happening," Goud said with a chuckle when asked about her first spell. "One ball came in a long way. Then when the ball was old, Harman wanted to take the slip off, but I said, 'no didi, let's keep the slip for this over.'
"I had that feeling from within that I could get a wicket, and I got it off the first ball. They found it tough to play our pacers. Because the ball was moving in and out, that's why I had a lengthy first spell."
Goud bowled six unchanged overs with the new ball. The other small contribution she made to India's win was her crucial lower-order runs with Richa Ghosh. Coming in with India 226 for 8, the ninth-wicket pair added 21 to haul India to 247.
Goud's contribution was 8 off 4 balls, including two fours: a cover drive off her first ball, against left-arm spinner Sadia Iqbal, and then a boundary off Diana Baig when she got inside the line to help a short delivery past short fine leg.
"Richa told me, if there's a ball to be hit, go for it. But if you're not able to, just give me a single," Goud said. "Because only a few overs were left, we needed to score as many as we could. First ball itself was hittable, so I hit a four. Then she told me, play like this only. The second [boundary] was a short ball, so I went for it. Look forward to playing well like this."
Goud would perhaps acknowledge tougher tests await, but the stage on Sunday wasn't to be scoffed at, even if India did come in with a 11-0 record over Pakistan in women's ODIs. With the men's Asia Cup having been played in an environment far from the bonhomie the teams have shown in the past, the focus was on the women's game to see if some of the hostilities would spill over. It didn't, even though the teams didn't shake hands before or after the match.
But the off-field noise was far from Goud's mind. "I wasn't thinking of India-Pakistan or other things," she said. "My duty is to bowl, and I was doing just that."

Shashank Kishore is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo