Deepti Sharma's unbeaten 64-ball 62 was her 15th 50-plus score in ODIs • Getty Images
There's little doubt that Deepti Sharma could walk into India's ODI squad as a bowler alone. Her three five-wicket hauls - the most by an India player in Women's ODIs - speak volumes of her bowling pedigree. Her batting, however, has often been a subject of debate - not over her ability but her approach.
Across 92 ODI innings, Deepti's strike rate sits at a modest 67.91. For someone who usually bats in the lower middle order, there's a general sense that she hasn't quite unlocked her full potential, despite being nearly a decade into her international career.
She has struck at 77.74 since the start of 2022, but that's still in the bottom half (35th) of the 57 batters to have scored at least 500 ODI runs in this period.
Which is why eyebrows were raised when she was promoted to No. 6, ahead of Richa Ghosh and Amanjot Kaur, in the first ODI against England on Wednesday in Southampton. India were 127 for 4 in the 28th over, with the required rate already nudging six an over.
Deepti responded with an unbeaten 64-ball 62, forging crucial partnerships with Jemimah Rodrigues (48 off 54) and Amanjot (20* off 14) to help seal a four-wicket win with 10 balls to spare.
"Whatever matches I've played, I've batted in similar situations," Deepti said at the post-match press conference. "I knew the calmer I am, composed I am... that was the turning point. The focus was on building a partnership with Jemimah. I knew if we worked on the partnership, we could take the game close."
Deepti turned the strike and kept milking runs along with Rodrigues, with the pair adding 90 for the fifth wicket off just 86 balls. Deepti had only hit two boundaries until her 32nd ball - when she gave Lauren Bell the charge and walloped a six over deep midwicket - but had made 29 off her first 31 deliveries with largely risk-free cricket.
"I was not nervous because I've played in these kinds of situations earlier," Deepti said. "I knew if I play till the end with Jemi, we can take the game deep. I was confident that if I was there till the end, I could finish the game. I was focusing on that. If Jemi hadn't got out we could've finished the game earlier. After that, Richa and Aman played well, finishing the game with two boundaries. Credit to her."
Deepti spoke of communicating well with Rodrigues during the partnership. One of the plans was to be prepared for Lauren Filer's bristling pace and potential short-ball tactics. Filer, easily the quickest bowler in sight in the first ODI, extracted lift off the surface every time she hit hard lengths.
The ball she bowled to dismiss Rodrigues in her second spell - her sixth over - didn't come out of the blue. Rodrigues attempted a scoop behind the wicket but only managed a tickle to the keeper with Filer finding extra bounce with her short ball. At that stage, India still needed 45 off 51 with five wickets in hand.
Filer continued to trouble the batters - Deepti got lucky on 53 when she got cramped for room and sent a top-edged pull flying to the boundary - but England couldn't quite exert pressure from the other end. And Deepti's pragmatism helped India ride the wobbles.
"We knew she'll have to bowl in the end, and we planned really well for that," Deepti said of the tussle with Filer. "We knew she'll bowl short balls. We were pretty ready. The fields she put behind the stumps, it was clear. We were clear of our plans."
The win marked India's fourth straight ODI victory in England, building on from their 3-0 sweep in 2022. They are building momentum heading into the World Cup, which they will host from September 30, but Deepti isn't looking that far ahead yet.
"As a team we've done some really good things, in Sri Lanka [where India won the tri-series in April] and here also. The World Cup is a little too far. We're not thinking about that. We're just thinking one match at a time."