Table of Contents
The Australia Women vs India Women rivalry has evolved from quiet 1977 Test beginnings in Perth to explosive modern spectacles. Early Australian dominance gave way to India’s gritty breakthroughs, World Cup heartbreaks, and historic upsets. Packed with aggression, tactical brilliance, record chases, and passionate fan moments, this timeline celebrates one of women’s cricket‘s greatest battles.
Latest Matches: Australia Women’s vs India women’s
| Tournament | Venue | Date | Toss | Australia Score | India Score | Result | Series | Player of the Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICC Women’s World Cup Semi-Final | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Navi Mumbai | Oct 30, 2025 | Australia won, elected to bat | 338/10 (49.5) | 341/5 (48.3) | India won by 5 wickets | ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 | Jemimah Rodrigues (IND) |
| ICC Women’s World Cup | Visakhapatnam | Oct 12, 2025 | N/A | 331/7 (49) | 330/10 | Australia won by 3 wickets | ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi | Sep 20, 2025 | N/A | 412/10 (47.5) | 369/10 (47) | Australia won by 43 runs | Australia Women tour of India 2025 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Cricket Stadium, Mullanpur | Sep 17, 2025 | N/A | 190/10 (40.5) | 292/10 (49.5) | India won by 102 runs | Australia Women tour of India 2025 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Cricket Stadium, Mullanpur | Sep 14, 2025 | N/A | 282/2 (44.1) | 281/7 (50) | Australia won by 8 wickets | Australia Women tour of India 2025 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | W.A.C.A. Ground, Perth | Dec 11, 2024 | N/A | N/A | N/A | Australia won by 83 runs | India Women tour of Australia 2024/25 | N/A |
| ICC Women’s T20 World Cup | Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah | Oct 13, 2024 | N/A | 151/8 (20) | 142/9 (20) | Australia won by 9 runs | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 9, 2024 | N/A | 149/3 (18.4) | 147/6 (20) | Australia won by 7 wickets | Australia Women in India T20I Series 2023/24 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 7, 2024 | N/A | 133/4 (19) | 130/8 (20) | Australia won by 6 wickets | Australia Women in India T20I Series 2023/24 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 5, 2024 | N/A | 141/10 (19.2) | 145/1 (17.4) | India won by 9 wickets | Australia Women in India T20I Series 2023/24 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Jan 2, 2024 | N/A | 338/7 (50) | 148/10 (32.4) | Australia won by 190 runs | Australia Women in India ODI Series 2023/24 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Dec 30, 2023 | N/A | 258/8 (50) | 255/8 (50) | Australia won by 3 runs | Australia Women in India ODI Series 2023/24 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Dec 28, 2023 | N/A | 285/4 (46.3) | 282/8 (50) | Australia won by 6 wickets | Australia Women in India ODI Series 2023/24 | N/A |
| Test | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Dec 21-24, 2023 | N/A | 219/10 & 261/10 | 406/10 & 75/2 | India won by 8 wickets | Australia Women in India Test Series 2023/24 | N/A |
| ICC Women’s T20 World Cup Semi-Final | Newlands, Cape Town | Feb 23, 2023 | N/A | 172/4 (20) | 167/8 (20) | Australia won by 5 runs | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2023 | N/A |
The Spark Ignites: Pioneering Clashes in the 1970s – From Humble Beginnings to World Stage Debuts
The Australia women’s national cricket team vs India women’s national cricket team timeline truly begins in January 1977 with the very first senior international encounter, a historic Women’s Test at Hale School in Perth. Australia, the more experienced side, elected to bat and posted 266 in their first innings thanks to Elaine Bray’s gritty 86 and solid contributions from Wendy Hills (48) and Peta Verco (26 not out). India’s spinners fought back bravely, led by Shubhangi Kulkarni’s remarkable 6 for 99, but the visitors managed only 122. Australia declared their second innings at 152 for 1, built on Lorraine Hill’s unbeaten 74 and Margaret Jennings’ 57, setting India a daunting 297. The Indians showed fight through Shantha Rangaswamy’s 55 but folded for 149, handing Australia a 147-run victory. Raelee Thompson starred with 4 for 41 in the fourth innings.
This clash sparked quiet respect in modest crowds, with Australia’s disciplined seam and medium-pace attack overwhelming India’s fragile batting. Just a year later, on 8 January 1978, the teams met again in the Women’s World Cup at Patna. India won the toss and bowled first. Australia reached 150 for 8, powered by Sharon Tredrea’s 56 and Jennings’ 33. India’s chase collapsed dramatically to 79 all out, with Peta Verco’s economical 3 for 9 proving decisive in a 71-run Australian win. These matches introduced early field aggression through tight line-and-length bowling and sharp catches, while Indian fans in Patna cheered every defiant stroke amid sparse Perth crowds that hinted at future passion. Tactics revolved around Australia’s batting depth against India’s spin threat, laying foundations for decades of rivalry.
| Date & Format | Venue & Toss | Scores & Result | Standout Performances & Records (with Interesting Facts) | Iconic Aggression & Fan Moments | Tactical Insights & Pressure Plays |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15-17 Jan 1977 (Women’s Test) | Hale School Ground, Perth; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 266 (Bray 86, Hills 48, Verco 26*; Kulkarni 6/99) & 152/1d (Hill 74*, Jennings 57) IND 122 (Edulji 32, Pandit 30; Thompson 2/25, Lutschini 2/31) & 149 (Rangaswamy 55; Thompson 4/41, Lutschini 2/39) Australia won by 147 runs | Bray’s 86: Highest score in match, patient against spin; Kulkarni’s 6/99: Best by Indian vs AUS in Tests then (fact: her spell included 22.2 overs of relentless leg-spin); Rangaswamy’s 55: Defiant captain’s knock; Partnerships: AUS 102 for 1st wicket (2nd inns, Hill-Jennings – set tone for dominance); Debuts: Verco & White (AUS) shone; Fact: Balls per over were 8, adding endurance test | Thompson’s bouncer barrages rattled Indian openers, leading to sharp catches; No sledging noted but competitive stares after wickets; Fans: Sparse Perth crowd (few hundred) applauded Rangaswamy’s pulls, whispering of women’s cricket’s rise; Moment: Local school kids watched, inspired by international flair | Australia used declaration aggressively to force result; India banked on spin (Kulkarni/Edulji bowled 41 overs combined) but batting exposed on seaming track; Pressure: IND’s 2nd inns collapse from 90/3 to 149 all out highlighted chase nerves |
| 8 Jan 1978 (Women’s ODI, World Cup) | Moin-ul-Haq Stadium, Patna; India won toss, fielded first | AUS 150/8 (S Tredrea 56, Jennings 33, Farrell 17; Bhattacharj 2/23, Itticheria 1/16) IND 79 (Pandit 17, Khalili 16, Banerjee 15; Verco 3/9, Cornish 2/10, S Hill 2/23) Australia won by 71 runs | S Tredrea’s 56: Aggressive with 7 fours, highest SR impact; Verco’s 3/9: Econ 1.00, dismantled top order; Partnerships: AUS 82 for 4th wicket (S Tredrea-Jennings – turned innings); Records: Verco’s spell set early benchmark for AUS pacers vs IND; Debut: Dholakia (IND) in WODIs; Fact: Second Women’s World Cup match, hosted in India, boosted global visibility | Verco’s tight lengths created suffocating pressure, with enthusiastic run-outs; Cornish’s variations beat edges; Fans: Thousands in Patna erupted for Indian boundaries but hushed during collapse; Moment: Local cheers for Banerjee’s 15 fueled patriotic pride, marking women’s cricket’s Indian fanbase growth | India opted to chase but death bowling leaked runs; Australia exploited field restrictions with middle-order acceleration; Pressure: IND’s top-order flop (4 wickets for 39) under World Cup spotlight, no superstars yet but raw emotion |
Tensions Simmer: The 1980s Stalemates and World Cup Heartbreak – Building Grit Under Pressure
The Australia women’s national cricket team vs India women’s national cricket team timeline heated up in the 1980s, shifting from sparse clashes to intense series that tested resolve. It started with the 1982 Women’s World Cup opener in Auckland on January 10, where Australia posted 227 for 6, Denise Emerson’s 77 and Jill Kennare’s 98 forging a 167-run stand. India crumbled to 74 all out, Raelee Thompson’s 2 for 9 and multiple run-outs exposing chase frailties, a 153-run defeat that stung Indian fans tuning in via radio, whispering of underdog dreams dashed.
Then came Australia’s 1984 tour of India, a grueling affair on dusty pitches. The four Tests all drew, epitomizing stalemates. In Delhi’s January 21-23 opener, India scored 185 and 240 for 9 declared, Diana Edulji’s 6 for 64 dismantling Australia to 263, but time ran out with Australia at 19 for 1 chasing 163. Lucknow’s second Test saw Australia declare twice (245 for 9 and 123 for 8), India replying 198 and surviving at 65 for 7. Ahmedabad’s third featured Australia’s mammoth 525, Peta Verco’s 105 and Jill Kennare’s 131, but India held firm. Mumbai’s finale had Sandhya Agarwal’s 134 and 83, yet another draw.
ODIs were one-sided heartbreaks: Australia swept 4-0. Faridabad’s first on January 19 saw India 162 for 8, Australia chasing 164 for 7 with Lindsay Reeler’s 60. Jaipur’s second: Australia 133 for 9, India 106. Pune’s third: India 194 for 9, Sudha Shah’s 53, but Australia cruised 196 for 5. Mumbai’s fourth sealed dominance.
| Date & Format | Venue & Toss | Scores & Result | Standout Performances & Records (with Interesting Facts) | Iconic Aggression & Fan Moments | Tactical Insights & Pressure Plays |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 Jan 1982 (Women’s ODI, World Cup) | Eden Park No 2, Auckland; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 227/6 (Emerson 77, Kennare 98, Tredrea 3/37 in bowling wait no, Chakraborty 3/37) IND 74 (Pendharker 18; Thompson 2/9, Martin 2/15) Australia won by 153 runs | Kennare’s 98 (near-century heartbreak); Emerson 77 on debut; Chakraborty 3/37 (India’s best); Partnerships: 167 for 2nd wicket (Emerson-Kennare, record stand then); Fact: 11 run-outs total (6 IND, 5 AUS) showed chaotic fielding; Debuts: 11 players across teams, marking global expansion | Run-outs galore signaled raw intensity, no sledging but frustrated celebrations; Fans: Sparse Auckland crowd, but Indian diaspora cheered Pendharker’s fight; Moment: Rangaswamy’s dismissal sparked audible groans, early sign of passionate support | Australia built innings patiently then accelerated; India chased aggressively but collapsed under pressure (from 36/2 to 74); World Cup nerves led to 6 run-outs, highlighting fielding lapses in big games |
| 19 Jan 1984 (Women’s ODI) | Nahar Singh Stadium, Faridabad; Australia won toss, fielded first | IND 162/8 (Kulkarni 44, Rangaswamy 35; Martin 3/34) AUS 164/7 (Reeler 60, Dawson 58*; Ghosh 3/28) Australia won by 3 wickets (10 balls left) | Reeler’s 60 & 2 catches (debut heroics); Ghosh 3/28 (best Indian figures); Partnerships: 72 for 4th wicket (Reeler-Dawson); Fact: 3 run-outs in IND innings intensified chase; Debuts: Fellows, Matthews, Reeler, Dawson, Piltz (AUS); Ghosh, Dey, Gupta (IND) | Gupta’s early wickets fired up local crowd; Fans: Faridabad thousands chanted for India, heartbreak in close finish; Moment: Reeler’s stumping sparked tense silence, building rivalry edge | India posted defendable total with middle-order grit; Australia rotated bowlers to contain, but pressure mounted in chase (121/6 before recovery); Run-outs under lights added drama |
| 21-23 Jan 1984 (Women’s Test) | Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi; India won toss, batted first | IND 185 (Kulkarni 42, Jogalekar 41; Price 4/52, Fullston 4/54) & 240/9d (Banerjee 63, Pendharker 33; Fullston 3/41) AUS 263 (Verco 81, Dawson 72; Edulji 6/64) & 19/1 (Read 12*) Match drawn | Edulji’s 6/64 (record haul vs AUS); Verco 81 on tough pitch; Partnerships: 141 for 3rd wicket (Verco-Dawson); Fact: 14 debuts (7 AUS, 7 IND), historic for women’s Tests; Rangaswamy’s captaincy inspired fightback | Edulji’s spin traps created on-field tension; Fans: Delhi crowd swelled for home spinners, cheers echoing for every wicket; Moment: Rangaswamy’s run-out ignited passionate roars | India declared aggressively to force win; AUS seam early, spin later; Pressure: AUS collapse from 200/2 to 263, IND survived time with 9 down |
| 25 Jan 1984 (Women’s ODI) | Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 133/9 (Kennare 28, Fellows 35*; Gupta 3/19) IND 106 (Dey 33, Pendharker 22; Price 2/14, Fullston 1/31) Australia won by 27 runs | Dey 33 (lone fighter on debut); Gupta 3/19 (fiery spell); Partnerships: 44 for 5th wicket (Kennare-Fellows); Fact: 5 run-outs in IND chase (aggression overload); Venue shift from Jullundur due to security | Run-outs fueled frustration, Gupta’s stares after wickets; Fans: Jaipur thousands mourned collapse, but hailed Dey’s grit; Moment: Rangaswamy’s run-out drew collective sighs | AUS defended low total with tight death bowling; IND chased steadily but imploded (from 73/2 to 106); Pressure: 5 run-outs under floodlights showed nerves |
| 28-30 Jan 1984 (Women’s Test) | KD Singh Babu Stadium, Lucknow; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 245/9d (Verco 67, Larsen 43*; Gupta 4/47) & 123/8d (Verco 34, Reeler 34; Gupta 4/53, Edulji 3/35) IND 198 (Gupta 48*, Chakraborty 26; Price 6/72) & 65/7 (Gupta 25*, Rangaswamy 19; Price 4/35) Match drawn | Gupta’s all-round brilliance (4/47, 48*, 4/53, 25*); Price 6/72 (best figures); Partnerships: 86 for 3rd wicket (Verco-Dawson, 1st inns); Fact: Debut: Fellows (AUS); 78-run last wicket stand (IND 1st inns, record vs AUS) | Gupta’s bouncers rattled AUS; Fans: Lucknow locals packed for spinners, cheers for Gupta’s survival; Moment: Rangaswamy’s wicket sparked defiant applause | AUS declared twice to push win; IND spin dominated but batting faltered; Pressure: IND 18/5 in 2nd inns, Gupta’s stand saved draw |
| 3-5 Feb 1984 (Women’s Test) | Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad; India won toss, batted first | IND 343 (Agarwal 71, Pendharker 51; Fullston 3/75, Martin 3/42) & 50/0 (Ghosh 30*, Edulji 16*) AUS 525 (Kennare 131, Verco 105, Price 104*; Kulkarni 3/133) Match drawn | Kennare 131, Verco 105, Price 104* (triple centuries rare); Agarwal 71; Partnerships: 134 for 3rd wicket (Verco-Kennare); Fact: AUS’s 525 highest total vs IND then | Martin’s pace created tension; Fans: Ahmedabad buzzed for India’s fightback; Moment: Price’s ton drew respectful claps from home crowd | IND batted long for draw; AUS seam exploited, spin tired; Pressure: IND 2nd inns casual, but AUS declaration loomed |
| 8 Feb 1984 (Women’s ODI) | Nehru Stadium, Pune; India won toss, batted first | IND 194/9 (Shah 53, Gadre 44; Price 2/40, Martin 2/47) AUS 196/5 (Reeler 47, Dawson 46; Edulji 2/21) Australia won by 5 wickets | Shah 53 (steady knock); Edulji 2/21; Partnerships: 99 for 1st wicket (Verco-Reeler, Verco retired hurt); Fact: Debut: Larsen (AUS); Verco retired hurt at 75/0 | Run-outs added edge; Fans: Pune crowd chanted for Shah; Moment: Dawson’s lbw silenced stands | IND set competitive total; AUS rotated strike; Pressure: AUS 188/5 before win, last-over tension |
| 10-13 Feb 1984 (Women’s Test) | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai; India won toss, batted first | IND 340 (Agarwal 134, Rangaswamy 54; Fullston 4/80) & 235/7d (Agarwal 83, Banerjee 72; Jacobs 4/72) AUS 358/8d (Kennare 99, Verco 78; Kulkarni 5/124) & 139/6 (Fullston 31*, Price 32; Edulji 2/33) Match drawn | Agarwal 134 & 83 (twin tons rare); Kulkarni 5/124; Partnerships: 153 for 1st wicket (2nd inns, Banerjee-Agarwal); Fact: Debut: Dey (IND) | Run-outs (4 total) showed intensity; Fans: Mumbai roared for Agarwal; Moment: Kennare’s 99 dismissal drew gasps | IND declared to set 218; AUS seam early, spin countered; Pressure: AUS 122/6 survived |
| 23 Feb 1984 (Women’s ODI) | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai; Details limited | IND total unknown; AUS won (series 4-0 sweep) | Sweep highlighted AUS dominance; Fact: Completed whitewash, building IND grit for future | Whitewash fueled fan frustration; Fans: Mumbai crowd supported despite loss; Moment: Final wicket sparked reflective cheers | AUS all-round superiority; IND learned from pressure chases |
Millennium Fireworks: 2000s Expansion and Format Shifts – ODIs Take Center Stage with T20 Sparks
The Australia women’s national cricket team vs India women’s national cricket team timeline exploded into the 2000s as women’s cricket gained global traction, with ODIs dominating and T20s igniting fresh drama. Australia remained powerhouse, but India, led by emerging stars like Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami, started chipping away at the dominance.
The decade opened with the 2000 Women’s World Cup in New Zealand, where Australia thumped India by 51 runs in Lincoln on December 6. Belinda Clark’s side posted 223/5, powered by Lisa Keightley’s classy 74 and Karen Rolton’s 61 (run out), while India’s chase faltered at 172/8 despite solid efforts from Anjum Chopra and Purnima Rau. This group-stage win foreshadowed Australia’s eventual title.
The 2005 World Cup final in South Africa delivered heartbreak for India. Australia amassed 215/4, Karen Rolton smashing an unbeaten 107* full of aggressive drives, then bowled India out for 117 to win by 98 runs. Indian fans felt the sting, but it fueled Mithali’s resolve.
In bilateral action, the 2006 Adelaide Test saw Australia crush India by an innings and 4 runs. Lisa Sthalekar’s 72 and Karen Rolton’s 63 built 250, before India collapsed to 93 and 153 follow-on, Neetu David’s spin offering resistance but not enough.
The real spark came in 2008 with the inaugural women’s T20I on October 28 at Hurstville Oval, Sydney. Australia edged India by 2 runs, posting 142/4 (Alex Blackwell 50*) as India fell agonizingly short at 140/4 (Mithali Raj 52*). That nail-biter introduced explosive batting and field aggression, with run-outs and sharp sledging adding edge.
| Date & Format | Venue & Toss | Scores & Result | Standout Performances & Records (with Interesting Facts) | Iconic Aggression & Fan Moments | Tactical Insights & Pressure Plays |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 Dec 2000 (Women’s ODI, World Cup) | Lincoln Green, Lincoln; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 223/5 (Keightley 74, Rolton 61 run out; Rau 2/39) IND 172/8 (Chopra 52, Rau 32; Rolton 2/20) Australia won by 51 runs | Keightley 74 (Player of Match, steady anchor); Rolton 61 (run out controversy); Partnerships: 110 for 2nd wicket (Clark-Keightley); Fact: Part of Australia’s unbeaten World Cup run; Debut vibes for several in growing women’s game | Rolton’s run-out sparked tense celebrations; Fans: Kiwi crowds cheered AUS dominance, Indian diaspora felt early heartbreak; Moment: Chopra’s 52 drew respectful applause | AUS built innings patiently, accelerated late; IND chased but middle-order collapse under pressure; Powerplay containment key |
| 10 Feb 2006 (Women’s Test, Only Test) | Adelaide Oval, Adelaide; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 250 (Sthalekar 72, Rolton 63; David 4/68) IND 93 (David 26; Sthalekar 3/19) & 153 f/o (Goswami 40; Sthalekar 3/37) Australia won by innings & 4 runs | Sthalekar 72 & 6 wickets (all-round hero); Rolton 63; Partnerships: 56 for 3rd wicket (Bulow-Rolton); Fact: AUS’s only Test vs IND in 2000s, dominant seam-spin combo | Sthalekar’s spin traps created frustration; Fans: Small Adelaide crowd appreciated grit, Indian supporters vocal for Goswami; Moment: Follow-on enforced drew gasps | AUS seam early, spin later on wearing pitch; IND batting collapsed twice; Pressure: 93 all out exposed technique gaps |
| 28 Oct 2008 (Women’s T20I, Only T20I) | Hurstville Oval, Sydney; India won toss, fielded first | AUS 142/4 (Blackwell 50*, Sthalekar 34; Sharma 2/21) IND 140/4 (Raj 52, Chopra 33*; Perry 1/18) Australia won by 2 runs | Blackwell 50* (debut T20 flair); Raj 52 (classy chase anchor); Partnerships: 68 for 3rd wicket (Raj-Chopra); Fact: Inaugural women’s T20I between teams, razor-close finish | Tight fielding, sharp run-outs added intensity; Fans: Growing Sydney crowd roared for thriller, Indian fans heartbroken in final overs; Moment: Last-ball dot sparked wild celebrations | AUS posted defendable with middle-order power; IND chased aggressively but fell short; Pressure: Death overs nerves, no super over then |
| 14 Mar 2009 (Women’s ODI, World Cup Super Six) | North Sydney Oval, Sydney; India won toss, batted first | IND 234/5 (Chopra 85, Raj 59*; Perry 2/36) AUS 218/7 (Healy 62, Perry 51; Goswami 2/33) India won by 16 runs | Chopra 85 (Player of Match, composed); Perry 51; Partnerships: 102 for 3rd wicket (Raj-Chopra); Fact: Rare upset in AUS home World Cup leg | Goswami’s pace rattled AUS top order; Fans: Packed Sydney stands erupted for Indian win, social media buzz began; Moment: Perry’s wicket sparked chants | IND built big total with partnerships; AUS chase faltered under spin pressure; Powerplay & death bowling decisive |
| Other 2000s Notes (bilateral ODIs sparse, AUS dominant overall) | Various venues | AUS swept most series; e.g., 2003 World Cup warm-ups | Raj & Goswami emerged as threats; Fact: Decade saw women’s cricket TV growth, boosting rivalry visibility | Rising aggression in run chases; Fans: Indian pride swelled with rare wins | Shift to aggressive batting, early T20 influence on ODIs; Pressure from global exposure |
Modern Legends Clash: 2020s Thrillers to 2025 Glory – Upsets, Dominance, and Global Spectacles
The Australia women’s national cricket team vs India women’s national cricket team timeline reached fever pitch in the 2020s, blending heart-stopping upsets, Australia’s relentless dominance, and India’s defiant breakthroughs on the world stage. It opened with crushing disappointment for India in the 2020 T20 World Cup final at the MCG on March 8. Australia posted 184/4, Alyssa Healy’s explosive 75 off 39 balls and Beth Mooney’s unbeaten 78* powering them. India collapsed to 99 all out in 19.1 overs, Megan Schutt’s 4/18 sealing an 85-run win. Over 86,000 fans witnessed the heartbreak, but it ignited India’s resolve.
The 2022 Commonwealth Games final in Birmingham delivered another thriller. Australia set 161/8, then bowled India out for 152 to win by 9 runs, Harmanpreet Kaur’s side falling agonizingly short despite fight from the middle order.
India flipped the script in the 2023 one-off Test at Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai. India amassed 406, Smriti Mandhana’s 127 and Jemimah Rodrigues’ 85 shining, then bowled Australia out twice (219 & 261) for an 8-wicket victory—India’s first Test win over Australia.
T20 battles stayed intense, but the 2025 ODI World Cup became legendary. In the league stage at Visakhapatnam, Australia chased India’s 330 to win by 3 wickets, Alyssa Healy starring. Yet in the semi-final at DY Patil, Navi Mumbai on October 30, Australia piled 338 (Phoebe Litchfield 119), only for India to chase it down—341/5 in 48.3 overs—with Jemimah Rodrigues’ unbeaten 127 and Harmanpreet Kaur’s 89 scripting the highest successful chase in women’s ODIs history. India reached the final, marking a seismic shift.
| Date & Format | Venue & Toss | Scores & Result | Standout Performances & Records (with Interesting Facts) | Iconic Aggression & Fan Moments | Tactical Insights & Pressure Plays |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 Mar 2020 (Women’s T20I, WC Final) | Melbourne Cricket Ground; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 184/4 (Healy 75, Mooney 78*; Deepti 2/38) IND 99 (19.1 ov) (Deepti 33; Schutt 4/18) Australia won by 85 runs | Healy 75 off 39 (explosive opener); Mooney 78* (unbeaten anchor); Partnerships: 115 for 1st wicket; Fact: Record MCG crowd (86,174) for women’s cricket; Schutt’s 4/18 dismantled chase | Intense fielding pressure, Schutt’s celebrations after wickets; Fans: Massive Aussie roar at MCG, Indian supporters heartbroken in final overs; Moment: Collapse from 58/5 sparked audible gasps | AUS accelerated in powerplay; IND chase nerves led to top-order failure; Pressure: No recovery after early wickets |
| 7 Aug 2022 (Women’s T20I, CWG Final) | Edgbaston, Birmingham; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 161/8 (Litchfield 52, Mooney 61; Renuka 3/33) IND 152 (19.3 ov) (Mandhana 40, Kaur 35; Schutt 2/23) Australia won by 9 runs | Litchfield 52 & Mooney 61; Partnerships: Key middle-order stands; Fact: Gold medal drama, India close from winning position | Tight run-outs and bouncer exchanges; Fans: Packed Birmingham crowd chanted for underdog India; Moment: Last-over tension drew global buzz | AUS defended with death bowling; IND aggressive chase fell short; Pressure: 9-run defeat from strong position fueled future fire |
| 21-24 Dec 2023 (Women’s Test, Only Test) | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 219 & 261 (McGrath 123, Mooney 40) IND 406 & 75/2 (Mandhana 127, Rodrigues 85; Gayakwad & Vastrakar key wickets) India won by 8 wickets | Mandhana 127 (historic ton); Rodrigues 85; McGrath 123; Fact: India’s first Test win vs AUS, massive turnaround | Spin traps created tension, Vastrakar’s celebrations; Fans: Mumbai crowd roared for home win; Moment: Mandhana’s winning boundary sparked wild cheers | IND built huge lead with patience; AUS collapsed under spin; Pressure: Follow-on and chase nerves overcome |
| 12 Oct 2025 (Women’s ODI, WC League) | Visakhapatnam; Australia won toss, fielded first | IND 330 (Mandhana high, others contributed) AUS 331/7 (Healy 142 off 107) Australia won by 3 wickets | Healy 142 (masterclass chase); Fact: Thrilling finish in WC buildup | Healy’s aggressive shots vs Indian bowlers; Fans: Packed venue erupted for close win; Moment: Last-wicket nerves | AUS rotated strike in chase; IND set big total but death leaks; Pressure: High-scoring thriller |
| 30 Oct 2025 (Women’s ODI, WC Semi-Final) | DY Patil Stadium, Navi Mumbai; Australia won toss, batted first | AUS 338 (Litchfield 119, Perry & Gardner fifties) IND 341/5 (48.3 ov) (Rodrigues 127*, Kaur 89) India won by 5 wickets | Rodrigues 127* (knock for ages); Kaur 89; Partnerships: Massive chases; Fact: Highest successful chase in women’s ODIs ever | Beamers, stare-downs, celebrations; Fans: Home crowd went berserk, social media exploded; Moment: Rodrigues’ ton sealed historic upset | AUS posted mammoth; IND chased with partnerships & flair; Pressure: Record chase under semi-final spotlight flipped rivalry narrative |
Key Performances ★
| Player | Team | Match Date | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jemimah Rodrigues | 🇮🇳 IND | Oct 30, 2025 | 127* off 134 balls (epic unbeaten century guiding India to a thrilling World Cup semi-final chase) |
| Alyssa Healy | 🇦🇺 AUS | Oct 12, 2025 | 142 off 107 balls (dominant century powering Australia’s record chase in the World Cup group stage) |
| Annabel Sutherland | 🇦🇺 AUS | Oct 12, 2025 | 5/40 (devastating five-wicket haul dismantling India’s batting lineup) |
| Beth Mooney | 🇦🇺 AUS | Sep 20, 2025 | 138 off 75 balls (explosive century anchoring Australia’s mammoth total in a high-scoring thriller) |
| Smriti Mandhana | 🇮🇳 IND | Sep 20, 2025 | 125 off 63 balls (blistering knock in a valiant chase, laced with 17 fours and 5 sixes) |
| Smriti Mandhana | 🇮🇳 IND | Sep 17, 2025 | 117 off 91 balls (stylish century setting up India’s commanding victory) |
| Phoebe Litchfield | 🇦🇺 AUS | Sep 14, 2025 | 88 off 80 balls (fluent innings steering Australia to a comfortable chase) |
| Kranti Goud | 🇮🇳 IND | Sep 17, 2025 | 3/28 (tight bowling spell restricting Australia to a low total) |
Conclusion
From sparse crowds in the 1970s to record-breaking stadiums in 2025, Australia Women vs India Women has delivered drama, resilience, and inspiration. India’s recent triumphs signal a shifting balance, yet the rivalry remains electric. As both teams push boundaries, future clashes promise even greater intensity, cementing their place in cricket history.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
When was the first Australia Women vs India Women international match?
The inaugural senior clash was a Women’s Test from January 15-17, 1977, at Hale School Ground, Perth. Australia won by 147 runs.
Has India ever beaten Australia in a World Cup final or semi-final?
No final win yet, but India stunned Australia in the 2025 ODI World Cup semi-final with a record 341/5 chase, the highest successful run-chase in women’s ODIs.
Who holds the most iconic individual performances in this rivalry?
Standouts include Alyssa Healy’s explosive 75 in the 2020 T20 WC final, Smriti Mandhana’s 127 in the 2023 Mumbai Test win, and Jemimah Rodrigues’ unbeaten 127* in the 2025 WC semi-final.
Why is the rivalry so intense in recent years?
Rising stakes in global tournaments, personal duels (Healy vs Mandhana, Perry vs Kaur), aggressive on-field battles, massive crowds, and social media amplification have turned matches into high-emotion spectacles.
What is the overall head-to-head record as of 2025?
Australia leads across formats, especially in ODIs and T20Is, but India’s breakthroughs—first Test win (2023), highest successful chase (2025)—show the gap narrowing dramatically in the modern era.
