Sneh Rana delivered the knockout blow. Four wickets on the final day handed India a crushing 270-run victory over England in the women's Test at Lord's — a historic result that will be remembered as one of the landmark moments in women's Test cricket.
Rana's incisive bowling on day five dismantled England's resistance and wrapped up a win that was comprehensive from start to finish. A 270-run margin at the Home of Cricket is not a narrow escape or a fortunate result — it is a statement of complete dominance across every session of a Test match.
This victory carries weight beyond the scoreline. Women's Test cricket has fought hard for its place on the calendar, and a result of this magnitude at Lord's does more for the format's visibility than any administrative decision could. India's players have written themselves into the history books, and Rana's name sits at the top of that list.
England will hurt from this. Losing by 270 runs at home, at Lord's, in a Test that was meant to showcase the growth of the women's game on the biggest stage — that is a result their management cannot brush aside. They will need to examine what went wrong across multiple departments before their next red-ball assignment.
