Sri Lanka Women vs India Women Match Scorecard: Live T20 Results, Key Stats & Top Performers
Sri Lanka Women vs India Women match scorecards are being searched everywhere right now, with fans desperate to track every run, wicket and powerplay burst. With India already 2–0 ahead in the T20I...
Sri Lanka Women vs India Women match scorecards are being searched everywhere right now, with fans desperate to track every run, wicket and powerplay burst.
Table Of Content
- Key Highlights – IND‑W vs SL‑W 2025
- Sri Lanka Women vs India Women Match Scorecard: What’s Happening?
- Match Scorecards – Quick Breakdown
- 1st T20I – India Women vs Sri Lanka Women, Visakhapatnam (Dec 20, 2025)
- 2nd T20I – India Women vs Sri Lanka Women, Visakhapatnam (Dec 23, 2025)
- Women’s ODI World Cup 2025 – India vs Sri Lanka, Guwahati
- Why These Scorecards Matter to Fans
- How to Use These Scorecards Smartly
- Final Thoughts
With India already 2–0 ahead in the T20I series and also owning a big World Cup win earlier in the year, the obvious question is what these latest SL‑W vs IND‑W clashes really reveal about both teams—let’s find out.
Key Highlights – IND‑W vs SL‑W 2025
- 1st T20I, Visakhapatnam (Dec 20, 2025): Sri Lanka Women posted 121/6 in 20 overs; India Women chased it with ease, finishing 122/2 in 14.4 overs to win by 8 wickets.
- Jemimah masterclass: Jemimah Rodrigues produced an unbeaten 69 off 44 balls, calmly steering the chase after a solid start from Smriti Mandhana.
- 2nd T20I, Visakhapatnam (Dec 23, 2025): Sri Lanka improved to 128/9 in 20 overs, but India replied with a blistering chase, reaching the target in just 11.5 overs at 129/2 for a 2–0 series lead.
- Shafali show: Shafali Verma smashed 69* (27‑ball fifty) and was named Player of the Match, combining with Jemimah Rodrigues for a rapid 58‑run stand that killed the chase inside the first 10 overs.
- Bowling squeeze: Across both games, Indian bowlers like Sneh Rana, Shree Charani, Deepti Sharma and Kranti Gaud restricted Sri Lanka to par scores through tight middle‑over spells.
- World Cup marker: Earlier in 2025, India beat Sri Lanka by 59 runs (DLS) in the ICC Women’s ODI World Cup opener at Guwahati, scoring 269/8 and bowling Sri Lanka out for 211.
Sri Lanka Women vs India Women Match Scorecard: What’s Happening?

In this December 2025 T20I series in India, the pattern is clear: Sri Lanka are battling hard to reach totals in the 120–130 range, but India’s batting firepower and deeper bowling attack are turning those targets into comfortable wins.
- In the 1st T20I, Sri Lanka’s 121/6 looked competitive on a slightly two‑paced Vizag surface, especially after Vishmi Gunaratne’s 39 anchored the innings. But India replied with intent: 55/1 in the powerplay, fifty up in 5.4 overs and 100 in 11.6, finishing 122/2 in 14.4 overs thanks to Jemimah’s composed 69*.
- In the 2nd T20I, Sri Lanka reached 128/9, with 100 coming up in 16.1 overs but regular wickets preventing a final surge. India then delivered one of their fastest chases against Sri Lanka—129/2 in 11.5 overs—with Shafali’s 69* dismantling both spin and pace.
Earlier in the year at the Women’s ODI World Cup 2025 in Guwahati, the scorecard told a similar story in the longer format: India’s 269/8, built on fifties from Deepti Sharma and Amanjot Kaur, proved too much as Sri Lanka folded for 211 against India’s spin‑heavy attack, losing by 59 runs (DLS).
Match Scorecards – Quick Breakdown
1st T20I – India Women vs Sri Lanka Women, Visakhapatnam (Dec 20, 2025)
Sri Lanka Women: 121/6 in 20 overs
- Top contributors:
- Vishmi Gunaratne – 39 (43), held the innings together at the top.
- Middle order batters like Harshitha Samarawickrama chipped in but could not accelerate enough, leaving Sri Lanka slightly short.
- Powerplay: 31/1 in 6 overs; Sri Lanka reached 100 only in 17.4 overs and closed at 121/6, a run rate of 6.05.
India Women: 122/2 in 14.4 overs
- Smriti Mandhana – 25 (25), four fours, provided a smooth platform at the top.
- Jemimah Rodrigues – 69* (44), ten fours, anchored and finished the chase with a high‑class unbeaten fifty.
- Powerplay: 55/1; India reached 50 in 5.4 overs and 100 in 11.6 overs, cruising to 122/2 in 14.4 overs.
- Result: India Women won by 8 wickets and took a 1–0 lead in the five‑match series.
2nd T20I – India Women vs Sri Lanka Women, Visakhapatnam (Dec 23, 2025)
Sri Lanka Women: 128/9 in 20 overs
- 100 came up in 16.1 overs, but tight spells from India in the middle overs meant they finished at 128/9.
- India’s bowlers: Sneh Rana, Shree Charani and Deepti Sharma squeezed run‑scoring opportunities, and Kranti Gaud supported with control at the top.
India Women: 129/2 in 11.5 overs
- Powerplay: India raced to 68/1 in 6 overs, their second‑best T20I powerplay score against Sri Lanka.
- Shafali Verma – 69*; she reached fifty off just 27 balls and finished unbeaten, attacking both pace and spin (42 runs off 16 balls vs spin at SR 262.5).
- Jemimah Rodrigues – 26 (15), shared a rapid 58‑run partnership that essentially ended the contest.
- Result: India chased 129 in just 11.5 overs, taking a 2–0 lead with three matches still to come. It was one of India’s quickest 120+ chases in women’s T20Is.
Women’s ODI World Cup 2025 – India vs Sri Lanka, Guwahati

India Women: 269/8 in 47 overs (rain‑reduced)
- Amanjot Kaur – 57; Deepti Sharma – 53; Sneh Rana added crucial lower‑order runs to lift India to a strong total.
Sri Lanka Women: 211 all out in 45.4 overs
- Chamari Athapaththu – 43, gave Sri Lanka hope before the middle order struggled badly against spin.
- Deepti Sharma 3/54, with Sneh Rana and Shree Charani sharing important wickets to keep Sri Lanka behind the DLS par score.
Result: India Women won by 59 runs (DLS), launching their World Cup campaign with a statement victory.
Why These Scorecards Matter to Fans
- India’s top order of Mandhana, Jemimah and Shafali regularly turn simple targets into dominant chases, which is why recent SL‑W vs IND‑W T20Is look so one‑sided.
- Sri Lanka are still improving, posting 120+ more often and getting standout knocks from players like Vishmi Gunaratne and Chamari Athapaththu, even though finishing and fielding remain weak points.
- These scorecards give fantasy players, analysts and new viewers vital context about who is in form, how conditions influence results, and where the real margins of victory come from.
- Looking beyond the headline result to the full scorecard shows exactly when the match swung—whether through a dropped catch, a miserly over from Sneh Rana, or a powerplay assault from Shafali.
How to Use These Scorecards Smartly
- Watch the powerplays: Check runs and wickets in the first six overs for both sides to see who set the tone—India’s 55/1 and 68/1 vs Sri Lanka’s 31/1 already tell you a lot.
- Track partnerships: Look at the biggest stands to understand which pair really controlled the innings.
- Compare economy and dot‑ball pressure: A bowler with 1/20 in 4 overs at a low economy, especially in the middle overs, can be more impactful than a 2‑for with higher runs conceded.
- Follow form lines: Keep an eye on recurring names—Shafali Verma, Jemimah Rodrigues, Deepti Sharma, Sneh Rana for India; Chamari Athapaththu and Vishmi Gunaratne for Sri Lanka—to see who is trending upwards or struggling.
Final Thoughts
The Sri Lanka Women vs India Women scorecards in 2025 tell a clear but evolving story: India are still the stronger, deeper team, yet Sri Lanka are pushing matches further, forming better partnerships and slowly understanding what it takes to challenge a World Cup‑winning side.For fans, every T20I and ODI scorecard is more than just statistics; it is a fresh chapter in this rivalry and a snapshot of how women’s cricket in the region is developing. Reading them with curiosity—examining phases of play, key partnerships and momentum‑changing spells—makes the games more enjoyable, the narratives easier to follow, and increases your chances of spotting the next breakout star before everyone else.So, what do you think? about the India vs SriLanka Women’s T20 ODI Let me know in the comments. And if you found this article helpful, share it with your friends. Investing is always better when you learn together. for more Sports news subscribe newssy.in



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