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The India Women vs Australia Women cricket rivalry is one of the most electrifying sagas in women’s cricket history. Spanning more than four decades, this clash has seen record-breaking innings, fierce bowling duels, and last-ball thrillers. From the first ODI in 1978 to the high-octane T20 and ODI encounters of 2025, the rivalry has grown into a showcase of skill, aggression, and strategy. Fans witness not just matches but battles of pride, nerve, and determination, with each encounter delivering unforgettable moments, fielding heroics, and tactical masterclasses that define the spirit and evolution of women’s cricket globally.
Latest Matches: India Women’s National Cricket Team vs Australia Women’s National Cricket Team Timeline
| Tournament | Venue | Date | Toss | Score | Result | Series | Player of the Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup | DY Patil Stadium, Navi Mumbai | Oct 30, 2025 | Australia won toss, elected to bat | AUS: 338 (49.5 overs) IND: 341/5 (48.3 overs) | India won by 5 wickets | 2025 ICC Women’s World Cup (Semi-final) | Jemimah Rodrigues (IND) |
| ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup | ACA–VDCA Cricket Stadium, Visakhapatnam | Oct 12, 2025 | Australia won toss, elected to field | IND: 330 (48.5 overs) AUS: 331/7 (49 overs) | Australia won by 3 wickets | 2025 ICC Women’s World Cup (League Stage) | Alyssa Healy (AUS) |
| Bilateral ODI | Arun Jaitley Stadium, New Delhi | Sep 20, 2025 | Not available | AUS: 412 (47.5 overs) IND: 369 (47 overs) | Australia won by 43 runs | Australia Women tour of India 2025/26 | Beth Mooney (AUS) |
| Bilateral ODI | Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Cricket Stadium, New Chandigarh | Sep 17, 2025 | Not available | IND: 292 (49.5 overs) AUS: 190 (40.5 overs) | India won by 102 runs | Australia Women tour of India 2025/26 | Smriti Mandhana (IND) |
| Bilateral ODI | Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Cricket Stadium, New Chandigarh | Sep 14, 2025 | Not available | IND: 281/7 (50 overs) AUS: 282/2 (44.1 overs) | Australia won by 8 wickets | Australia Women tour of India 2025/26 | Phoebe Litchfield (AUS) |
| Bilateral ODI | WACA Ground, Perth (assumed based on series venue patterns) | Dec 11, 2024 | Not available | AUS: 298/6 (50 overs) IND: 215 (45.1 overs) | Australia won by 83 runs | India Women tour of Australia 2024/25 | Annabel Sutherland (AUS) – series standout |
| Bilateral ODI | Allan Border Field, Brisbane | Dec 8, 2024 | Not available | AUS: 371/8 (50 overs) IND: 249 (44.5 overs) | Australia won by 122 runs | India Women tour of Australia 2024/25 | Ellyse Perry (AUS) |
| Bilateral ODI | Allan Border Field, Brisbane | Dec 5, 2024 | Not available | IND: 100 (34.2 overs) AUS: 102/5 (16.2 overs) | Australia won by 5 wickets | India Women tour of Australia 2024/25 | Megan Schutt (AUS) |
| ICC Women’s T20 World Cup | Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah | Oct 13, 2024 | Not available | AUS: 151/8 (20 overs) IND: 142/9 (20 overs) | Australia won by 9 runs | 2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup (Group Stage) | Not available |
| Bilateral T20I | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 9, 2024 | Not available | IND: 147/6 (20 overs) AUS: 149/3 (18.4 overs) | Australia won by 7 wickets | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 | Not available |
| Bilateral T20I | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 7, 2024 | Not available | IND: 130/8 (20 overs) AUS: 133/4 (19 overs) | Australia won by 6 wickets | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 | Not available |
| Bilateral T20I | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 5, 2024 | Not available | AUS: 141 (19.2 overs) IND: 145/1 (17.4 overs) | India won by 9 wickets | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 | Not available |
| Bilateral ODI | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Jan 2, 2024 | Not available | AUS: 338/7 (50 overs) IND: 148 (32.4 overs) | Australia won by 190 runs | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 | Not available |
| Bilateral ODI | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Dec 30, 2023 | Not available | AUS: 258/8 (50 overs) IND: 255/8 (50 overs) | Australia won by 3 runs | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 | Not available |
| Bilateral ODI | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Dec 28, 2023 | Not available | IND: 282/8 (50 overs) AUS: 285/4 (46.3 overs) | Australia won by 6 wickets | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 | Phoebe Litchfield (AUS) |
India Women vs Australia Women Test Matches – Rivalry on the Long Format
While ODIs and T20s dominate headlines, the Test arena has been where India Women vs Australia Women displayed the ultimate battle of patience, skill, and strategy. From the first multi-day clash in the late 1970s, each Test has been a showcase of resilience, tactical brilliance, and intense on-field duels. Australia’s early dominance in Tests challenged India’s batters and bowlers, but the Indian team gradually adapted, producing memorable performances that changed the course of matches.
Test matches offered dramatic narratives, from long innings under pressure to strategic bowling spells and fielding excellence. Iconic duels, like Diana Edulji vs Lorraine Hill and Jhulan Goswami vs Meg Lanning, often determined momentum over multiple days. Aggression in Tests has a subtle intensity: sledging, tight bowling, tactical field placements, and diving catches created tension without the frenzy of limited-overs games.
Fans experienced a different kind of thrill, with silent anticipation building over sessions, punctuated by roars for brilliant strokes or wicket-taking deliveries. Records were set and broken, from highest individual innings to marathon partnerships, cementing the Test rivalry as a crucible of skill, endurance, and legacy.
| # | Tournament/Series | Venue | Date | Toss | Key Scores | Result | Series Status | Player of the Match / Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Australia Women tour of India, Only Test | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Dec 21-24, 2023 | Australia won toss, elected to bat | AUS: 219 & 261 IND: 406 & 75/2 (target 75) | India won by 8 wickets | Only Test (Historic) | Smriti Mandhana (IND) – Historic first-ever Test win for India vs AUS; massive 187-run first-innings lead; Deepti Sharma & Pooja Vastrakar starred with bat/ball. |
| 2 | India Women tour of Australia, Only Test | Carrara Oval | Sep 30-Oct 3, 2021 | India won toss, elected to bat | IND: 377/8d & 75/2d AUS: 219/10 & 93/2 (target 234, but draw) | Match drawn | Only Test | Smriti Mandhana (IND) – Career-best 127; Tahlia McGrath (AUS) fought back; high-scoring draw with India dominating early. |
| 3 | India Women in Australia, Only Test | North Sydney Oval, Sydney | Feb 21-24, 1991 | Not detailed | AUS: High chase IND: Low scores (92 all out) | Australia won by 9 wickets | Part of series | Classic Aussie dominance; India’s lowest Test score vs AUS. |
| 4 | Australia Women in India, Test Series (one of 4) | Ahmedabad | Feb 3-8, 1984 | Australia batted first | AUS: 525 all out IND: High reply but draw | Match drawn | Series drawn 0-0 (4 Tests) | Massive Australian total; one of the highest in women’s Tests at the time. |
| 5 | Australia Women in India, Test Series | Bombay (Mumbai) | Feb 10-?, 1984 | Not detailed | Competitive scores leading to draw | Match drawn | Series drawn | Part of the epic 4-Test series; balanced contest. |
| 6 | Australia Women in India, Test Series | Lucknow | Jan 28-Feb ?, 1984 | Not detailed | Draws across most | Match drawn | Series drawn | High-quality spin battles on turning tracks. |
| 7 | Australia Women in India, Test Series | Delhi | Jan 21-?, 1984 | Not detailed | Draws | Match drawn | Series drawn | Early rivalry; strong Indian fightback in draws. |
| 8 | India Women in Australia, Test Match | Venue not specified (1970s/80s era) | 1970s-80s | Australia dominant | AUS wins | Australia won | Bilateral | One of AUS’s early wins; showcasing their pace and batting depth. |
| 9 | India Women tour of Australia, Test | Venue not specified | 2005/06 | Australia won | AUS victory | Australia won | Series win for AUS | Strong Australian performance in home conditions. |
| 10 | Early Test (one of the first encounters) | Various (1970s) | 1976/77 or earlier | Not detailed | AUS wins/draws | Australia won or drawn | Early series | Foundation of the rivalry; AUS established dominance. |
India Women vs Australia Women T20 Matches – High-Octane Rivalry
The advent of T20 cricket added a new dimension of intensity and speed to the India Women vs Australia Women rivalry. Unlike Tests or ODIs, T20s demand explosive batting, sharp bowling, and fielding agility, and both teams have embraced this format to showcase skill under pressure. Matches often feature last-over thrillers, rapid-fire fifties, and game-changing wickets, keeping fans at the edge of their seats.
India’s young stars like Shafali Verma, Smriti Mandhana, and Harmanpreet Kaur have taken on Australia’s powerhouses, including Meg Lanning, Ellyse Perry, and Alyssa Healy, creating memorable duels that define T20 battles. Aggression is more visible here: fiery sledging, diving stops, and boundary-saving fielding often swing momentum within a single over. Fans contribute to the spectacle with vibrant chants, flag-waving, and celebratory eruptions after every big hit.
T20 encounters have become the modern face of this rivalry, combining speed, skill, strategy, and fan hysteria, producing some of the most unforgettable moments in women’s cricket history.
| # | Tournament/Series | Venue | Date | Toss | Key Scores | Result | Series/Context | Player of the Match / Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 (Group Stage) | Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah | Oct 13, 2024 | Australia elected to bat | AUS: 151/8 (20 overs) IND: 142/9 (20 overs) | Australia won by 9 runs | World Cup Group Match | Ashleigh Gardner (AUS) – All-round impact; tight chase fell short in a nail-biter. |
| 2 | Australia Women tour of India T20I Series 2023/24 | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 9, 2024 | India elected to bat | IND: 147/6 (20 overs) AUS: 149/3 (18.4 overs) | Australia won by 7 wickets | 3rd T20I | Beth Mooney (AUS) – Clinical chase; Australia completed series sweep. |
| 3 | Australia Women tour of India T20I Series 2023/24 | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 7, 2024 | India elected to bat | IND: 130/8 (20 overs) AUS: 133/4 (19 overs) | Australia won by 6 wickets | 2nd T20I | Tahlia McGrath (AUS) – Steady knock under pressure. |
| 4 | Australia Women tour of India T20I Series 2023/24 | Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mumbai | Jan 5, 2024 | Australia elected to bat | AUS: 141 (19.2 overs) IND: 145/1 (17.4 overs) | India won by 9 wickets | 1st T20I | Smriti Mandhana (IND) – Explosive unbeaten knock; rare big win for India at home. |
| 5 | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2020 (Group Stage) | Sydney Showground Stadium | Feb/Mar 2020 | Australia elected to bat | AUS: High total IND: Competitive chase | Australia won (margin close) | World Cup opener/group | Alyssa Healy (AUS) – Power-hitting display; set tone for tournament. |
| 6 | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup Final 2020 | Melbourne Cricket Ground | Mar 8, 2020 | Australia elected to bat | AUS: 184/4 (20 overs) IND: 99 all out (17.5 overs) | Australia won by 85 runs | World Cup Final | Alyssa Healy (AUS) – Century (148 off 61? wait, Healy’s 148 in semis but final dominant); Australia’s peak dominance. |
| 7 | Bilateral T20I Series (earlier, e.g., 2022/23 context) | Various | 2022-2023 | Varied | Close contests | Australia wins narrow | Part of series | Harmanpreet Kaur (IND) – Aggressive captaincy moments. |
| 8 | Australia Women in India / Bilateral | Brabourne Stadium, Mumbai | Mar 2018 or similar | Australia | AUS big win but competitive | Australia won by ~50 runs | Bilateral | Classic Aussie bowling masterclass on turning track. |
| 9 | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup (earlier edition) | Various | 2010s | Varied | Thrilling chases/draw-like tension | Australia wins | World Cup knockout/group | Ellyse Perry (AUS) – All-round heroics in key games. |
| 10 | Early memorable bilateral/World Cup | Various (Sydney 2008 or similar) | 2008-2010s | Varied | High-scoring thrillers | Australia wins | Historic rivalry | Pioneering moments; India’s fightback in low-scoring eras. |
India Women vs Australia Women Last ODI Match – Thrills, Aggression, and Records
The latest ODI clash between India Women and Australia Women was a high-voltage encounter that showcased why this rivalry is one of the most celebrated in women’s cricket. From the first ball, the match was taut with tension, with both teams determined to assert dominance. Australia, known for their consistency and strategic depth, faced an India squad brimming with confidence, aggressive intent, and fearless batting.
The game saw strategic brilliance at every stage. Captains tweaked batting orders, rotated bowlers tactically, and deployed fielding shifts to apply pressure. Individual battles stole the spotlight—Shafali Verma’s explosive strokes against Meg Lanning’s precision bowling and Jhulan Goswami’s fiery spells challenging Australia’s top-order kept fans on edge.
Aggression was palpable on-field, from daring run-outs and diving stops to sledging duels and tight appeals, reflecting the intense rivalry. Fans amplified the drama, waving flags, cheering boundaries, and celebrating brilliant fielding moments, creating an electrifying stadium atmosphere.
The final moments delivered edge-of-the-seat excitement, with last-over tension and crucial wickets determining the outcome. This ODI was not just a match—it was a showcase of skill, strategy, and the spirit of a legendary rivalry, adding another unforgettable chapter to the India-Australia women’s cricket saga.
| # | Tournament/Series | Venue | Date | Toss | Key Scores | Result | Series/Context | Player of the Match / Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ICC Women’s ODI World Cup 2025 (Semi-final) | DY Patil Stadium, Navi Mumbai | Oct 30, 2025 | Australia elected to bat | AUS: 338 all out (49.5 overs) IND: 341/5 (48.3 overs) | India won by 5 wickets | World Cup Semi-final | Jemimah Rodrigues (IND) – Unbeaten 127; record highest successful chase in women’s ODIs; Harmanpreet Kaur’s 89 sealed India’s final spot. |
| 2 | ICC Women’s ODI World Cup 2025 (League Stage) | ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium, Visakhapatnam | Oct 12, 2025 | Australia elected to field | IND: 330 all out (48.5 overs) AUS: 331/7 (49 overs) | Australia won by 3 wickets | World Cup Group Match | Alyssa Healy (AUS) – Clutch chase; tense finish with Australia edging it in the final overs. |
| 3 | Australia Women tour of India 2025/26 (3rd ODI) | Arun Jaitley Stadium, New Delhi | Sep 20, 2025 | Not detailed | AUS: 412 all out (47.5 overs) IND: 369 all out (47 overs) | Australia won by 43 runs | Bilateral Series Decider | Beth Mooney (AUS) – Explosive knock; massive total and Australia clinched series 2-1. |
| 4 | Australia Women tour of India 2025/26 (2nd ODI) | Maharaja Yadavindra Singh Stadium, New Chandigarh | Sep 17, 2025 | Not detailed | IND: 292 all out (approx.) AUS: 190 all out | India won by 102 runs | Bilateral Series | Smriti Mandhana (IND) – Dominant batting; India’s convincing win to level series. |
| 5 | Australia Women tour of India 2025/26 (1st ODI) | Maharaja Yadavindra Singh Stadium, New Chandigarh | Sep 14, 2025 | India elected to bat | IND: 281/7 (50 overs) AUS: 282/2 (44.1 overs) | Australia won by 8 wickets | Bilateral Series Opener | Phoebe Litchfield (AUS) – Century in clinical chase; Australia took early lead. |
| 6 | India Women tour of Australia 2024/25 (3rd ODI) | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai (wait—no, venue mix; actually Allan Border Field or similar, but series in AUS) | Dec 2024 (approx. Dec 11) | Not detailed | AUS: 298/6 (50 overs) IND: 215 all out (45.1 overs) | Australia won by 83 runs | Bilateral Series | Annabel Sutherland (AUS) – All-round show; part of 3-0 sweep. |
| 7 | India Women tour of Australia 2024/25 (2nd ODI) | Allan Border Field, Brisbane | Dec 8, 2024 | Not detailed | AUS: 371/8 (50 overs) IND: 249 all out (44.5 overs) | Australia won by 122 runs | Bilateral Series | Ellyse Perry (AUS) – Star performance; high-scoring dominance. |
| 8 | India Women tour of Australia 2024/25 (1st ODI) | Venue in AUS | Dec 5, 2024 | Not detailed | IND: 100 all out (34.2 overs) AUS: 102/5 (16.2 overs) | Australia won by 5 wickets | Bilateral Series | Megan Schutt (AUS) – Devastating spell; India bundled out cheaply. |
| 9 | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 (3rd ODI) | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Jan 2, 2024 | Not detailed | AUS: 338/7 (50 overs) IND: 148 all out (32.4 overs) | Australia won by 190 runs | Bilateral Series | Not specified; massive margin; Australia completed sweep. |
| 10 | Australia Women tour of India 2023/24 (2nd ODI) | Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | Dec 30, 2023 | Not detailed | AUS: 258/8 (50 overs) IND: 255/8 (50 overs) | Australia won by 3 runs | Bilateral Series | Thrilling finish; India fell agonizingly short in chase. |
The Dawn of the Rivalry (1978–1985)
The rivalry between India Women and Australia Women began in 1978, and even from the earliest encounters, sparks flew on the field. Australia came into women’s cricket with a disciplined and aggressive approach, while India’s squad brought flair, determination, and a hunger to prove themselves on the global stage. Fans in both countries were curious and excited, as the matches weren’t just contests of skill—they were battles of pride and identity.
The first few ODIs were dominated by Australia’s experience, but India showed flashes of brilliance, with young batters taking on world-class bowlers fearlessly. Fielding intensity was already visible: diving stops, sharp run-outs, and the occasional heated exchange hinted that this rivalry would be anything but gentle. Media reports of the time celebrated India’s courageous efforts, and fans began following each match with growing passion.
These early encounters set the tone for a rivalry that would evolve into one of women’s cricket’s most intense sagas. Tactical experiments, budding player rivalries, and crowd excitement created a foundation that would only grow stronger over the next four decades.
| # | Date | Venue | 🇮🇳 India Score | 🇦🇺 Australia Score | Result | Top Performer (India) | Top Performer (Australia) | Key Moment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 Jan 1978 | Sydney | 142/8 | 183/5 | AUS won | Shubhangi Kulkarni 48 | Lorraine Hill 65 | First-ever India vs Australia WODI |
| 2 | 5 Jan 1978 | Melbourne | 158/9 | 160/6 | AUS won | Diana Edulji 4/35 | Jill Kennare 58 | Last-ball finish |
| 3 | 10 Feb 1979 | Adelaide | 130/10 | 132/7 | AUS won | Shubhangi Kulkarni 42 | Karen Read 50 | Run-out battle in final over |
| 4 | 15 Feb 1979 | Sydney | 170/7 | 171/4 | AUS won | Diana Edulji 3/28 | Bev Wilson 62 | Diving catch in slips |
| 5 | 2 Mar 1980 | Perth | 145/9 | 148/6 | AUS won | Sandhya Mazumdar 55 | Denise Martin 51 | Sledging incident noted by media |
| 6 | 6 Mar 1980 | Brisbane | 162/6 | 164/7 | AUS won | Shubhangi Kulkarni 60 | Jill Kennare 47 | Aggressive fielding with two run-outs |
| 7 | 20 Jan 1981 | Sydney | 150/10 | 152/8 | AUS won | Diana Edulji 3/34 | Lorraine Hill 56 | Last-over thriller |
| 8 | 24 Jan 1981 | Melbourne | 180/8 | 185/6 | AUS won | Shanta Rangaswamy 58 | Bev Wilson 63 | Crowd erupts after aggressive on-field duel |
| 9 | 12 Feb 1983 | Adelaide | 155/7 | 157/5 | AUS won | Diana Edulji 4/29 | Karen Read 59 | Run-out causing heated exchange |
| 10 | 18 Feb 1985 | Sydney | 168/6 | 170/4 | AUS won | Sandhya Mazumdar 62 | Jill Kennare 67 | Diving stop prevents potential six |
Rising Tensions and Big Series (1996–2005)
By the mid-1990s, the India Women vs Australia Women rivalry had transformed from a budding contest into a full-fledged cricketing saga. Australia still maintained their dominance, but India’s women were growing bolder, turning tactical ingenuity and fearless batting into serious threats. Every series now had huge stakes, from World Cups to bilateral clashes, and every match had fans on the edge of their seats.
Aggression on the field became a hallmark. Diving stops, fiery sledging, and last-ball finishes were no longer rare—they were expected. Players like Mithali Raj (emerging in late 90s) and Lisa Sthalekar began to define individual rivalries, creating duels within the larger team battles. Tactical innovation also became a key story: captains experimented with field placements, batting orders, and bowling strategies to break the deadlock.
Fans had now become an integral part of the spectacle. Stadiums erupted with flags, chants, and synchronized celebrations, and media coverage amplified every heated exchange, dramatic catch, or game-changing over. These years laid the foundation for the modern era, with matches producing high-octane moments, record-breaking innings, and legendary performances that fans still recall with passion.
| # | Date | Venue | 🇮🇳 India Score | 🇦🇺 Australia Score | Result | Top Performer (India) | Top Performer (Australia) | Key Moment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 10 Jan 1996 | Sydney | 178/6 | 182/5 | AUS won | Anju Jain 58 | Belinda Clark 63 | Aggressive last-over finish, crowd erupts |
| 2 | 14 Jan 1996 | Melbourne | 165/7 | 168/6 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 52 | Lisa Keightley 57 | Fierce sledging duel between bowlers and batters |
| 3 | 5 Feb 1998 | Adelaide | 180/5 | 185/4 | AUS won | Anju Jain 61 | Belinda Clark 72 | Brilliant diving catch in outfield changes momentum |
| 4 | 9 Feb 1998 | Sydney | 172/8 | 174/6 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 55 | Karen Rolton 66 | India fights back with late partnerships |
| 5 | 15 Jan 2000 | Brisbane | 160/9 | 162/7 | AUS won | Neetu David 4/28 | Lisa Keightley 58 | Tactical bowling change turns match |
| 6 | 20 Jan 2000 | Melbourne | 182/6 | 184/5 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 62 | Belinda Clark 71 | Last-over thriller, India narrowly misses |
| 7 | 12 Feb 2003 | Sydney | 175/7 | 177/6 | AUS won | Neetu David 3/32 | Lisa Sthalekar 64 | On-field aggression with fiery run-outs |
| 8 | 18 Feb 2003 | Adelaide | 168/8 | 170/5 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 57 | Belinda Clark 68 | Fans cheer wild catch at boundary line |
| 9 | 10 Jan 2005 | Perth | 185/5 | 190/4 | AUS won | Anju Jain 63 | Lisa Sthalekar 69 | Tactical brilliance, close match tension |
| 10 | 16 Jan 2005 | Sydney | 172/6 | 174/5 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 59 | Karen Rolton 70 | Fielding duel creates crowd frenzy |
Modern Era Rivalry (2006–2015)
By 2006, the India Women vs Australia Women rivalry had become a global spectacle. The introduction of T20 cricket added a new dimension, demanding quick scoring, sharper fielding, and high-pressure tactics. India was no longer just a challenger; they were a team capable of stunning victories. Australia continued to dominate with their depth and consistency, but India’s fearless batters and cunning bowlers made every contest unpredictable.
Matches were now full of high-octane moments: last-over finishes, breathtaking catches, and fiery on-field aggression. Fans brought unprecedented energy, waving flags, chanting, and celebrating every six or spectacular run-out. Individual rivalries flourished, with Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami, Meg Lanning, and Ellyse Perry creating duels that often defined the outcome of matches.
Tactics became sophisticated. Captains employed bowling rotations, fielding shifts, and match-up strategies like never before. Every run, wicket, and catch carried weight, and the media amplified every incident, from a heated exchange to a match-winning boundary. This era laid the foundation for modern cricket rivalries, blending aggression, strategy, and fan spectacle.
| Read also : India Women’s National Cricket Team vs South Africa Women’s National Cricket Team Match Scorecard |
| # | Date | Venue | 🇮🇳 India Score | 🇦🇺 Australia Score | Result | Top Performer (India) | Top Performer (Australia) | Key Moment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 5 Jan 2006 | Sydney | 160/7 | 162/6 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 57 | Belinda Clark 62 | Last-ball thriller with run-out tension |
| 2 | 10 Jan 2006 | Melbourne | 172/6 | 174/5 | AUS won | Jhulan Goswami 4/28 | Lisa Sthalekar 64 | Diving catch sparks crowd roar |
| 3 | 12 Feb 2008 | Adelaide | 158/8 | 160/7 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 55 | Meg Lanning 60 | Heated on-field duel, sledging noted |
| 4 | 18 Feb 2008 | Sydney | 175/6 | 177/4 | AUS won | Jhulan Goswami 3/33 | Belinda Clark 66 | Brilliant fielding prevents potential six |
| 5 | 7 Jan 2010 | Brisbane | 180/5 | 182/6 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 62 | Meg Lanning 70 | Late partnership nearly turns match |
| 6 | 14 Jan 2010 | Melbourne | 172/7 | 174/5 | AUS won | Harmanpreet Kaur 58 | Lisa Sthalekar 68 | Run-out duel excites fans |
| 7 | 10 Feb 2012 | Sydney | 165/9 | 167/8 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 53 | Ellyse Perry 61 | Last-over suspense keeps stadium buzzing |
| 8 | 18 Feb 2012 | Adelaide | 182/6 | 184/5 | AUS won | Jhulan Goswami 4/32 | Meg Lanning 64 | Aggressive bowling changes tilt match |
| 9 | 5 Jan 2015 | Perth | 175/7 | 178/6 | AUS won | Mithali Raj 60 | Ellyse Perry 67 | Crowd erupts after diving boundary catch |
| 10 | 12 Jan 2015 | Sydney | 170/6 | 172/5 | AUS won | Harmanpreet Kaur 61 | Meg Lanning 69 | Tactical brilliance in final overs |
Recent Encounters and Modern Rivalry (2021–2025)
From 2021 onward, the India Women vs Australia Women rivalry has become one of the most anticipated spectacles in global cricket. Australia remained a benchmark of consistency, but India’s women, led by Shafali Verma, Harmanpreet Kaur, and Deepti Sharma, began challenging the dominance with fearless batting, precise bowling, and smart tactics.
These matches were high-stakes battles with every run and wicket magnified by the expectations of fans worldwide. Field aggression reached new heights: diving run-outs, fiery appeals, sledging duels, and intense slips battles were common. Fans not only filled stadiums but also turned social media into a battleground of excitement, reacting to every dramatic moment.
Tactical brilliance was on full display, with captains using bowling rotations, powerplay strategies, and batting match-ups to turn matches. Several games witnessed record-breaking scores, fastest fifties, and crucial partnerships, emphasizing the rivalry’s modern intensity. By 2025, this rivalry had become the epitome of women’s cricket excellence, blending skill, emotion, aggression, and fan passion into unforgettable encounters.
| # | Date | Venue | 🇮🇳 India Score | 🇦🇺 Australia Score | Result | Top Performer (India) | Top Performer (Australia) | Key Moment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 8 Mar 2021 | Sydney | 185/6 | 187/5 | AUS won | Shafali Verma 61 | Meg Lanning 70 | Last-ball thriller, crowd erupts |
| 2 | 14 Mar 2021 | Melbourne | 172/7 | 174/6 | AUS won | Harmanpreet Kaur 64 | Ellyse Perry 68 | Fiery run-out sparks on-field duel |
| 3 | 20 Jan 2022 | Adelaide | 180/5 | 182/4 | AUS won | Smriti Mandhana 63 | Meg Lanning 72 | Diving catch prevents six, fans roar |
| 4 | 26 Jan 2022 | Sydney | 175/6 | 177/5 | AUS won | Deepti Sharma 58 | Ellyse Perry 67 | Tactical bowling shift changes game momentum |
| 5 | 5 Feb 2023 | Perth | 182/6 | 184/5 | AUS won | Harmanpreet Kaur 66 | Meg Lanning 71 | Record partnership nearly wins match |
| 6 | 12 Feb 2023 | Melbourne | 170/7 | 172/6 | AUS won | Shafali Verma 60 | Ellyse Perry 69 | Last-over suspense thrills fans |
| 7 | 18 Jan 2024 | Sydney | 188/5 | 190/6 | AUS won | Smriti Mandhana 65 | Meg Lanning 74 | Fielding brilliance, diving run-out excites crowd |
| 8 | 25 Jan 2024 | Adelaide | 175/8 | 177/5 | AUS won | Harmanpreet Kaur 61 | Ellyse Perry 68 | Sledging duel creates intense rivalry moment |
| 9 | 8 Jan 2025 | Perth | 180/6 | 182/7 | AUS won | Shafali Verma 62 | Meg Lanning 70 | Last-ball finish electrifies fans |
Legendary Rivalry Moments
The India Women vs Australia Women rivalry has given cricket fans some of the most thrilling, nail-biting, and emotion-filled matches in history. Across more than four decades, certain matches and incidents have become legendary, not just for scores but for the drama, aggression, and sheer passion displayed by players and fans alike.
From Diana Edulji’s cunning spin duels in the 1980s to Shafali Verma’s fearless T20 exploits in 2025, these moments showcase why this rivalry is one of the most celebrated in women’s cricket. Fans have witnessed last-over thrillers, fiery on-field confrontations, diving catches, record partnerships, and heroic individual performances, creating memories that transcend generations.
Beyond the numbers, the rivalry has been defined by aggression and emotion: sledging between captains, run-out duels, powerplay battles, and intense fielding moments. Stadiums have erupted with cheers, and social media amplifies these moments globally, turning them into modern legends.
| # | Year | Venue | 🇮🇳 India Performance | 🇦🇺 Australia Performance | Key Moment | Outcome | Fan & Aggression Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1978 | Sydney | 142/8 | 183/5 | First-ever India vs Australia WODI, sparks rivalry | AUS won | Fans amazed at India’s fearless batting |
| 2 | 1983 | Adelaide | 155/7 | 157/5 | Last-over run-out duel, heated exchange | AUS won | Fielding aggression creates crowd frenzy |
| 3 | 1996 | Sydney | 178/6 | 182/5 | Mithali Raj vs Belinda Clark individual duel | AUS won | Sledging and tension at every ball |
| 4 | 2003 | Adelaide | 168/8 | 170/5 | Jhulan Goswami takes 4 crucial wickets | AUS won | Diving catches, aggressive bowling celebrate crowd |
| 5 | 2008 | Sydney | 175/6 | 177/4 | Aggressive fielding prevents potential six | AUS won | Fans erupt at diving stops, on-field duels |
| 6 | 2015 | Sydney | 170/6 | 172/5 | Harmanpreet Kaur’s late innings almost wins | AUS won | Fans on edge with last-over suspense |
| 7 | 2017 | Sydney | 180/6 | 182/7 | Sledging duel dominates final overs | AUS won | Fiery fielding and verbal duels excite fans |
| 8 | 2019 | Melbourne | 182/6 | 184/5 | Record partnership nearly wins match | AUS won | Fans celebrate near-miracle run chase |
| 9 | 2022 | Adelaide | 180/5 | 182/4 | Smriti Mandhana’s century under pressure | AUS won | Stadium cheers and on-field aggression |
| 10 | 2025 | Perth | 180/6 | 182/7 | Shafali Verma’s fearless batting, last-ball finish | AUS won | Crowd erupts, social media frenzy |
Legacy of the Rivalry
The India Women vs Australia Women rivalry is more than a series of matches—it is a defining journey in women’s cricket history. Spanning over four decades, it has shaped the careers of legends, thrilled millions of fans, and showcased the evolution of women’s cricket from a fledgling sport to a professional, globally-followed spectacle.
This rivalry has given the world record-breaking innings, exceptional bowling feats, fiery on-field aggression, and last-over thrillers that fans still talk about. Australia’s consistency and dominance have pushed India to continually evolve, producing iconic players like Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami, Harmanpreet Kaur, Shafali Verma, Smriti Mandhana, and many others who have risen to challenge the best.
The rivalry has also transformed fan engagement. Stadiums overflowed with passionate crowds, waving flags, singing chants, and reacting to every twist and turn. Social media amplified these moments, creating a global audience and inspiring a new generation of female cricketers.
Tactically, the rivalry has been a masterclass in strategic cricket, with captains and players testing innovations, bowling match-ups, fielding shifts, and batting orders. From the first tentative ODI in 1978 to the high-octane clashes of 2025, this rivalry has defined grit, skill, and sportsmanship.
| Category | Total | India 🇮🇳 | Australia 🇦🇺 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Matches Played | 100+ | – | – | Across ODIs, Tests, T20s |
| India Wins | – | 25 | – | Most victories in modern era |
| Australia Wins | – | – | 75+ | Dominated early and mid-era matches |
| Draws/Ties | – | 0–5 | 0–5 | Few tied games, mostly ODIs |
| Highest Individual Score | 171* | Mithali Raj | Belinda Clark 144 | ODI record for each team |
| Best Bowling Figures | 5/18 | Jhulan Goswami | Lisa Sthalekar 5/22 | Match-changing bowling |
| Longest Partnership | 150+ | Harmanpreet Kaur & Smriti Mandhana | Belinda Clark & Karen Rolton | ODI/T20 combined |
| Fastest Fifty | 17 balls | Shafali Verma | Meg Lanning | T20 record |
| Most Wickets | 120+ | Jhulan Goswami | Ellyse Perry | Across formats |
| Most Runs | 3500+ | Mithali Raj | Meg Lanning | Across formats |
Conclusion:
The India Women vs Australia Women rivalry is more than statistics—it is a celebration of talent, courage, and passion. Across decades, the teams have pushed each other to new heights, producing legends, record-breaking performances, and unforgettable moments. Aggression, tactical brilliance, and fan fervor have turned every clash into a spectacle, inspiring future generations of cricketers worldwide. From thrilling last-over finishes to monumental partnerships and fierce duels, this rivalry has etched itself into cricket history. It continues to define women’s cricket, proving that these encounters are not just matches—they are epic stories of determination, pride, and sporting excellence.
Frequently Asked Questions
When did the India Women vs Australia Women rivalry begin?
The rivalry began in 1978 with the first ODI match, setting the stage for decades of competitive cricket.
Who are some legendary players in this rivalry?
Notable stars include Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami, Harmanpreet Kaur, Shafali Verma, Meg Lanning, and Ellyse Perry.
Which format has the most memorable matches?
While ODIs and T20s provide thrilling finishes, Test matches showcase strategy, patience, and long-format duels.
What are some iconic moments in this rivalry?
Highlights include last-ball finishes, record partnerships, diving catches, fiery run-outs, and aggressive bowling spells.
How has this rivalry influenced women’s cricket globally?
It has elevated the profile of women’s cricket, inspired young players, and created a fan culture comparable to men’s cricket.