Matches (22)
Men's Under-19 World Cup (5)
SA20 (3)
WPL (1)
BPL (4)
BBL (3)
Hong Kong All Stars (3)
New Zealand in India (1)
Vijay Hazare Trophy (1)
Super Smash (1)
RESULT
11th Match (N), DY Patil, January 17, 2026, Women's Premier League
(18.2/20 ov, T:167) 169/2

RCB Women won by 8 wickets (with 10 balls remaining)

Player Of The Match
96 (61)
smriti-mandhana
Cricinfo's MVP
106.02 ptsImpact List
smriti-mandhana
Report

Mandhana, Voll, bowlers make it four in four for RCB

Shafali Verma's half-century in vain for Delhi Capitals as they remain at the bottom of the table

S Sudarshanan
S Sudarshanan
17-Jan-2026 • 5 hrs ago
Smriti Mandhana acknowledges her half-century, Delhi Capitals vs Royal Challengers Bengaluru, WPL 2026, DY Patil Stadium, January 17, 2026

Smriti Mandhana fell four short of a century  •  BCCI

Royal Challengers Bengaluru 169 for 2 (Mandhana 96, Voll 54*, Kapp 1-21) beat Delhi Capitals 166 (Shafali 62, Hamilton 36, Bell 3-26, Satghare 3-27) by eight wickets
Smriti Mandhana became the ninth player to enter the 90s in the WPL. For a large part of her knock, she looked set to end the tournament's century drought: she needed just four and Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) were 12 away from their 167-run target. She missed out though, falling for 96 off 61, but RCB went onto seal their fourth successive win.
Lucy Hamilton, whose cameo with the bat earlier in the evening got Delhi Capitals (DC) to a total of 166, dived to her right at backward point to deny Mandhana and extend the WPL's wait for its first centurion.
For a third time in this season, RCB's new-ball bowlers had a big say in the win. Thanks to Lauren Bell and Sayali Satghare, they picked up four wickets in the first nine balls after opting to chase. Shafali Verma then resisted with a half-century and aided by a 19-ball 36 by debutant Hamilton at No. 9, DC managed to get to a respectable total.
But it was never going to challenge RCB, especially with Mandhana being in sublime form. Georgia Voll struck an unbeaten half-century as well and ensured RCB got home with eight wickets and ten balls to spare.
RCB ended the Navi Mumbai leg of the WPL with an unblemished record in four games while DC were dealt their third defeat in four matches.

Bell, Satghare make the new ball talk

Playing her first WPL season, Bell has been a revelation for RCB with the new ball. She began with a short ball which Lizelle Lee pulled with disdain through backward square leg. But next ball, she speared in a swinging yorker on leg stump. Lee's weight was on the back foot expecting another short ball and was bowled behind her legs. Two balls later, Bell got through Laura Wolvaardt's bat-pad gap to castle her for a two-ball duck. Having bowled outswingers till then, Bell got one to nip back in from a length and had Wolvaardt play down the wrong line.
From the other end Satghare, brought in for Arundhati Reddy who was unwell, produced a double-strike of her own. Her Mumbai team-mate Jemimah Rodrigues greeted her by scooping her for four through fine leg first ball. But Satghare shifted the line to outside off and got it to move in a little. Rodrigues went for the dab but chopped it onto the stumps. On the very next ball, Marizanne Kapp could do little about a length ball that held its line and hit top of off. DC were 10 for 4 in the second over.

Shafali lifts DC

While the damage was being done at the other end, Shafali watched helplessly, having faced just the one ball - the first of the game. When her turn to take strike came in the third over, she shimmied down the track and missed a length ball. She looked to pull another but only got an under-edge. She mistimed a double towards midwicket before punching one off the middle of the bat to end the over. That got her going.
Shafali then hit two sixes in the next over from Satghare, followed it with two more fours in the fifth over. She had scored 30 of the 41 DC had after five overs, and was well set by the time Shreyanka Patil came on to bowl. She saw Niki Prasad being dropped on Patil's first ball, and then got an outside edge for four. When her turn to take strike came, she went dot, six, six to help take 19 from the last over of the powerplay.
DC were 60 for 4 after six overs, but Shafali faced only four balls in the next four overs. She soon got to a 27-ball half-century and fell for a 41-ball 62 when she scythed a Bell slower ball to backward point.

Mandhana, Voll make light work of the chase

Kapp had dismissed Grace Harris five times in 24 innings before Saturday, and that seemed to play on Harris' mind. She looked tentative against the new ball, a single coming via an inside edge off Kapp. The DC allrounder got the better of Harris when she toe-ended a loft to wide mid-off. That brought Voll, who came in the XI for D Hemalatha, in at No. 3. While she took her time, Mandhana was at her fluent best.
She hit three fours - two pulls and one square drive - in Hamilton's first over, then a four and a six off Kapp and Nandani Sharma respectively. Despite that RCB could manage only 37 for 1 in six overs. Mandhana then toyed with spinners N Shree Charani and Sneh Rana, getting back-to-back fours against each of them and got to fifty off 31 balls. She relied more on placement than power. Once Mandhana fell, Voll got to her half-century off 41 balls and sealed the win.
Mandhana and Voll added 142 for the second wicket, the third-highest partnership for any wicket in the WPL, setting the tone for the Vadodara leg, which starts on January 19.

S Sudarshanan is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @Sudarshanan7

Language
English
Win Probability
RCB-W 100%
DC-WRCB-W
100%50%100%DC-W InningsRCB-W Innings

Over 19 • RCB-W 169/2

RCB Women won by 8 wickets (with 10 balls remaining)
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Women's Premier League

TeamMWLPTNRR
RCB-W44081.600
MI-W52340.151
GG-W4224-0.319
UPW-W5234-0.483
DC-W4132-0.856