RESULT
20th Match (D/N), Indore, October 19, 2025, ICC Women's World Cup
(50 ov, T:289) 284/6

ENG Women won by 4 runs

Player Of The Match
109 (91)
heather-knight
Report

England in semi-finals after India unravel in tense finish

Mandhana 88, Harmanpreet 70 in vain as India suffer their third successive defeat

Shashank Kishore
Shashank Kishore
19-Oct-2025 • Updated 4 hrs ago
Heather Knight brought up a quick century, India vs England, Women's ODI World Cup, Indore, October 19, 2025

Heather Knight's century set up England's win  •  ICC/Getty Images

England 288 for 8 (Knight 109, Jones 56, Deepti 4-51) beat India 284 for 6 (Mandhana 88, Harmanpreet 70, Deepti 50, Sciver-Brunt 2-47) by four runs
Indore was a giant party waiting to take off on Diwali eve. Smriti Mandhana and Harmanpreet Kaur had put together a century stand. Deepti Sharma knocked off a measured half-century after picking up four wickets with the ball.
When India needed 57 off 57 balls, with seven wickets in hand, their attempt to scale down their highest-successful chase in women's ODIs was well on track. But big-match nerves took centre stage, like it often has in the recent past. They collapsed sensationally, and fell short by four runs. England joined Australia and South Africa in the semi-finals.
India have now lost their third straight game, their campaign threatening to derail swiftly as they next face New Zealand in a crucial clash on Thursday.
England's win was set up by Heather Knight, whose 109 helped overcome a wobble when England were tested by India's slower bowlers. Her century stand with Nat Sciver-Brunt gave them the platform for a lift-off towards the end. But a late collapse meant they managed 289 when 320 was within their reach.
For much of India's chase, it seemed as if that collapse would come back to haunt England. Haunt it did, but to India, who have lots to ponder - not least the composition of their line-up, after they took a bold call of playing with a batter short - Jemimah Rodrigues dropped in favour of Renuka Singh.
India were rocked early, losing Pratika Rawal for 6 in the third over. Harleen Deol started slowly, and managed just 4 off 26 balls outside of her five boundaries as the asking rate crept up. Having spent time at the crease, like she had in each of her four previous knocks in the tournament, she threw it away - lbw playing back to Charlie Dean's indrifter.
Mandhana was far from fluent, but Harmanpreet's arrival took some pressure off her. The Indian captain was off the mark with a sumptuous flick off Sciver-Brunt, and looked seemingly keen on not allowing Sophie Ecclestone to settle by opening up the off side and repeatedly lofting her inside-out.
Harmanpreet's enterprise helped Mandhana, who had faced just 18 balls in the first 12 overs of India's chase, settle in. Mandhana was watchful, but every now and then, there were flashes of brilliance - like when she picked off two boundaries behind square off Ecclestone.
Once she got those two fours, Mandhana switched gears to raise her half-century off 60 balls, barely acknowledging the applause. On 43 at that point, Harmanpreet also turned up the tempo and moved to 70 before she glided Sciver-Brunt to short third, England breathing a sigh of relief at breaking a 125-run stand.
Deepti and Mandhana then knocked the ball into the gaps, seemingly intent on taking the chase deep. Deepti's sensible approach also took pressure off Mandhana, forcing Sciver-Brunt to bring back Linsey Smith for another spell a tad earlier than she might have otherwise. This proved to be a masterstroke as she had Mandhana hole out to long-off on 88. Even so, at 234 for 4 in 41.2 overs, this was India's game to lose.
However, nerves took over. Richa Ghosh drilled one straight to cover, Deepti miscued a slog, reminiscent of the shot she played in that 2017 final, and suddenly Sneh Rana and Amanjot Kaur were left with too much to do. Smith conceded just four in a clutch 48th over, leaving India needing 23 off 12. Then with 14 needed, she came back to finish off India, ensuring none of her first four deliveries went to the boundary.
As well as the spinners bowled, it would be hard to look beyond Knight's century that gave England a chance in the first place. If her unbeaten 79 in Guwahati helped England overcome Bangladesh's spin strangle, Sunday's innings was a masterclass in sweeps and reverse sweeps.
After Amy Jones did the early running to construct a measured half-century, it was Knight who injected momentum through the middle overs, putting on 113 with Sciver-Brunt. Having begun sedately, she only shifted gears after the pair raised the fifty of their partnership.
While the sweep was Knight's calling card - no spinner was spared - to say her knock was only about that stroke wouldn't do justice to her running between the wickets, a mark of the work she's had to put in to improve her fitness following a career-threatening injury. She also displayed her brute bottom-handed power in shovelling Kranti Gaud for six, the only one of the innings, in the 38th over.
Knight was reprieved twice in her nineties, but she soon brought up her century off 86 deliveries before her dismissal led to a meltdown with England managing just 36 off the last five overs. This would've cost them on most nights, but Sunday was their night. Thanks to their spinners, England remain unbeaten in the tournament.

Shashank Kishore is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo

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ICC Women's World Cup

TeamMWLPTNRR
AUS-W54091.818
ENG-W54091.490
SA-W5418-0.440
IND-W52340.526
NZ-W5124-0.245
BAN-W5142-0.676
SL-W5032-1.564
PAK-W5032-1.887