Stats - Tazmin Brits fastest to seven hundreds in women's ODIs
Her 159-run partnership with Sune Luus against NZ is the highest for SA for any wicket in Women's World Cups
Namooh Shah
06-Oct-2025
Tazmin Brits got to seven ODI hundreds in 41 innings • ICC/Getty Images
232 - The target chased down by South Africa on Monday is the highest by any team against New Zealand in the women's World Cup, going past their own record - 229 in Hamilton in 2022.
101 - The runs scored by Tazmin Brits, which makes her the third South Africa batter to score a hundred in the women's World Cup. Linda Olivier in 2000 and Marizanne Kapp in 2013 are the other two.
5 - Hundreds by Brits in 2025, the most by any player in a calendar year in women's ODIs. She went past Smriti Mandhana, who scored four hundreds in 2024 and also has four so far in 2025.
Brits has also scored four hundreds in her last five ODI innings.
1 - Brits took 41 innings to score seven ODI hundreds. That is the fewest by a batter in women's ODIs, bettering the record of Meg Lanning, who took 44 innings to get there.
Brits took 87 balls to complete her seventh ODI hundred, which is the fastest by her, and the fourth-fastest by a South Africa batter in women's ODIs.
2 - Brits now has 749 runs in ODIs in 2025, the second-most for a South Africa batter in a calendar year. She is only behind Laura Wolvaardt, who scored 882 runs in 2022.
159 - The partnership between Brits and Sune Luus for the second wicket, is the highest for South Africa for any wicket in women's World Cups. They went past a long-standing record of 128* between Dane van Niekerk and Kapp in 2013.
It is also South Africa's third-highest partnership for the second wicket in women's ODIs (where ball-by-ball data is available).
1 - Lea Tahuhu dismissed Brits to take her 30th wicket in ODI World Cups and with that became the leading wicket-taker for New Zealand in the tournament. Tahuhu went past Catherine Campbell, who has 29 wickets.
350 - Suzie Bates became the first woman to play 350 international matches across formats. Harmanpreet Kaur is next on the list with 342 international caps.
Namooh Shah is a stats analyst at ESPNcricinfo