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Taking the game beyond the boundaryThe women in blue have expanded the meaning of national pride to encompass strength, empathy, and equality within a single frame.
Mousumi Roy
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>India’s players celebrate with the trophy during the presentation ceremony after winning the ICC Women's World Cup 2025, at the DY Patil Stadium, in Navi Mumbai.</p></div>

India’s players celebrate with the trophy during the presentation ceremony after winning the ICC Women's World Cup 2025, at the DY Patil Stadium, in Navi Mumbai.

Credit: PTI Photo

When India’s women in blue lifted the ICC World Cup, the moment transcended sport. It was more than a trophy -- it was a generational triumph built on grit, grace, and perseverance. For decades, these athletes fought for space in a game that rarely made room for them. Their victory is a testament to endurance, belief, and the steady march towards gender equality in Indian sport. 

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For years, women’s cricket in India existed on the periphery. Matches drew little media attention, sponsorships were scarce, and many players juggled jobs to afford travel and training. Pioneers like Diana Edulji, Shantha Rangaswamy, Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami carried the game through sheer conviction. They played with borrowed kits, often in near-empty stadiums, sustained only by passion and pride.

This World Cup win is the culmination of their legacy. It represents not only individual excellence but also institutional reform. The integration of women’s cricket into the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), the rise of the Women’s Premier League, and increased investment in training and sports science have transformed the landscape. What was once a struggle for recognition is now a showcase of professionalism and precision.

The women in blue embody the four pillars that define modern sport: grace -- not a performance of elegance, but a display of composure under pressure; grit -- the unseen endurance behind long hours in the nets; power -- the audacity to hit over the boundary, defy expectations, and lead the charge; and determination -- the resolve to keep showing up even when the spotlight looked away. Their gameplay in this tournament was marked by tactical brilliance.

The captaincy was sharp, the fielding agile, and the batting fearless. Each boundary declared that women’s cricket had moved beyond novelty -- it had become elite competition. Behind the flair lay months of disciplined training, fitness regimens and analytical preparation that matched the best in the world.

Every great sporting victory rewrites a piece of national identity, and this one reshapes how India imagines itself. Cricket has long mirrored India’s hierarchies of class, region, and gender. For women to claim the sport’s highest prize is an act
of quiet revolution. It asserts that talent, not tradition, determines belonging.

This win resonates beyond stadiums. It will echo in classrooms, where girls now dream of bats as well as textbooks; in living rooms, where parents rethink ambition for their daughters; and in boardrooms and broadcast studios, where women’s sport must be seen not as charity but as national investment.

India has long celebrated women’s victories with surprise, as if they were exceptions to the rule. This triumph challenges that reflex. It insists that women’s excellence is not miraculous but inevitable when given opportunity. The women in blue have shown that sporting success depends not on gender but on systems that allow skill to flourish.

Public discourse, too, is changing. Commentators now discuss technique, not tokenism. Crowds attend for the game, not the novelty. Young boys look up to women cricketers as role models. These subtle cultural shifts mark the real progress—less visible than trophies, but far more transformative.

Despite the celebrations, much work remains to be done. Pay disparities persist, infrastructure for women athletes outside cricket remains limited, and grassroots programmes often lack funding. The next challenge is to convert symbolic victory into structural parity, equal contracts, dedicated academies, and consistent media visibility.

True equality in sport will come when women’s victories are covered not as “firsts” but as part of a continuum. This requires consistent policy support, corporate partnerships, and media responsibility. India’s sporting institutions must ensure that this momentum becomes a legacy.

The World Cup will gleam in a cabinet, but its glow will last far longer in the minds of millions. Every young girl swinging a bat today is part of that continuum. Every parent who now sees sport as a viable future for their daughter contributes to that change. This victory redefines what it means to play for India. It’s not only about competition but representation in claiming space in a field long fenced off.

The women in blue have expanded the meaning of national pride to encompass strength, empathy, and equality within a single frame. History has indeed been made, but the story is not over. The next chapter will be written on how India sustains this energy through equal pay, better facilities, and an inclusive sporting culture. 

(The author writes about politics, material culture, and economic history)

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(Published 05 November 2025, 00:48 IST)