
Indian women and South African women collided ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 Final at the Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai, in a match that promises to crown a new champion. India posted a competitive 298/7 in their 50th over Do not give shafali‘s 87 and Deepti Sharma‘s 58 anchors the innings. South Africa’s chase began with a 52-run opening stand between the captain Laura Wolvaardt and Compensation Britsbut slipped when the momentum was sharp Amanjot Kaur It was a surprising run out to deny the Brits, giving India their first breakthrough into the final.
Amanjot Kaur’s crucial run-out takes out Tazmin Brits
The pivotal moment came at 10th Brits collapsed to the ball side and called for a quick single. Amanjot, walking on fire, full of lightning speed, picked up the ball and fired a direct shot at the non-striker’s end.
The Brits were caught short, 23 off 35 balls, a promising opening partnership and run out for 35 balls, sending shockwaves through the South African camp. The Indian players erupted in celebration as the run-out not only marred the opening stand but also lifted India’s spirits at a crucial juncture in the match.
Here is the video:
A quick stack and a 🎯
Elation all around #AnjotkaurDirect-hit provides the Team India Needs! #Tanzimbritts Turns it back! 💥# Cwc25 Final 👉 #IndvsaLive now 👉 https://t.co/ggh9yfhtix pic.twitter.com/ep9eyuz2zi
– Star Sports (@starsportsindia) November 2, 2025
Read: HND VS SA: Shafali Verma Scripts record-breaking knocks in Women’s World Cup 2025 final
India’s disciplined bowling restrained South Africa in the final
India’s bowling attack was clinical from the start Renuka Singh leads the charge with a neat 5-0-18-0 spell. Kranti is a mess, Amanjot Kaur, Deepti Sharmaand Shree Charani All contributed with disciplined lines and lengths, checking arm level.
Charani hit early, is taken out Anneke bosch For a duck, the spinners remained firm in the middle overs. South Africa reached 78/2 in 15 overs, 221 more runs at the required rate of 6.31, but India’s bowlers had already set the tone for a tense chase.
This article was originally published WomenCricket.coma Cricket era Company.

