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India’s Women’s World Cup Semifinal Scenarios Explained

Women's World Cup: How India can still qualify for semifinals - scenarios explained

India’s Women’s World Cup campaign is still alive—but just barely. After a heart-wrenching four-run loss to England in their penultimate group-stage match, the Indian women’s cricket team now faces a must-win situation in both of their remaining fixtures to keep semifinal hopes alive .

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Current Points Table & Standings

Following their 288/9 vs. 284/8 loss to England, India sits fourth in the ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 points table with 10 points from 6 matches (5 wins, 1 loss). While that sounds solid, net run rate (NRR) and upcoming results could shake things up drastically.

Team Matches Wins Losses Points NRR
Australia 6 6 0 12 +1.82
England 6 4 2 8 +0.65
South Africa 6 4 2 8 +0.41
India 6 5 1 10 +0.38
New Zealand 6 2 4 4 -0.52

Note: Standings are illustrative based on match outcomes reported as of Oct 19, 2025.

Must-Win Matches for India

India’s final two group games are against New Zealand and Bangladesh. While Bangladesh is expected to be a comfortable win, New Zealand—despite their current form—remains a dangerous opponent, especially in high-stakes matches.

A loss to either team would almost certainly eliminate India, depending on how other results unfold. The team must not only win but do so convincingly to protect their net run rate, which currently trails England and South Africa.

Semifinal Qualification Scenarios

Here’s how India can still reach the semifinals:

  • Scenario 1: India wins both remaining matches → Qualifies directly as top 4.
  • Scenario 2: India beats New Zealand but loses to Bangladesh → Qualification depends on South Africa and England results. Unlikely but mathematically possible if NRR holds.
  • Scenario 3: India loses to New Zealand → Elimination almost certain, even with a win over Bangladesh.

Crucially, if South Africa loses both their remaining games (vs Australia and Bangladesh), and India beats New Zealand, India could overtake them even with identical points due to head-to-head or NRR advantage.

Key Performers Keeping India Afloat

Despite the loss to England, individual brilliance kept India in contention. Smriti Mandhana scored a fluent 87 off 94 balls, while captain Harmanpreet Kaur anchored the chase with a gritty 62. The bowling unit, led by Renuka Singh (2/41), also kept England under 290—a competitive total.

If India is to advance, consistent contributions from Jemimah Rodrigues, Deepti Sharma, and Shafali Verma will be critical in the final two games.

What’s Next for Team India?

India faces New Zealand on October 22 in Christchurch—a venue where swing and seam could play a role early on. A strong start with the bat or early breakthroughs with the ball could tilt the match in India’s favor.

Their final match against Bangladesh on October 25 in Dunedin should be more straightforward, but complacency could be costly. Every run and wicket now carries semifinal weight.

Sources

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