Antalya Türkiye – On a bright and sunny day in the coastal city of Antalya, Türkiye on Monday, February 2, 2026 some Indian footy His-Story was made. In the supervision of Head Coach Amelia Valverde, the Indian Senior Women’s National team – dubbed as Blue Tigresses pulled off a 1-0 win against German opponents Hertha BSC Frauen to conclude their exposure tournament in Huelva, Spain.
The scoreline makes it sound like a narrow escape, but the game itself was that of tactical progression, physical obstinacy and increasing desire to play – and beat — European foes. For a team that is in the final stages of preparation for the AFC Women’s Asian Cup Australia 2026, this win means more than just numbers or a rounded off practice match; it vindicates the hard yards they have swallowed in Turkish Mediterranean over many months.
The Breakthrough: Grace Dangmei’s Moment of Magic
The breakthrough came in the 37th minute. After keeping up the pressure, India punished a Hertha defensive mistake. Grace Dangmei, the veteran forward whose speed has long been her biggest weapon, had space on the edge of the box. Calming her nerves like a seasoned pro, she jagged home past German custodian to send the Indian bench in hysterics.
Dangmei’s goal was not only an individual accomplishment, but also the product of a fast buildup to attack that Valverde has been trying to put into place in his team. India managed to beat the German high press on multiple occasions by playing long balls from the defensive third to the wings, which was supposed to help them prepare for high pressing they are likely to face in the Asian Cup.
Tactical Evolution under Amelia Valverde
Ever since taking over the reins, Amelia Valverde has transformed the identity of Blue Tigresses. Once known for their counter-attacking élan but defensive fragility, the side displayed a new “compactness” against Hertha BSC.
“A victory against a German team, irrespective of its colour or stripe in age-group football is always a statement,” an official from the AIFF media cell commented after the game. “The emphasis wasn’t only on scoring; it was also on managing the game. As important as the goal itself was how we kept the lead in the second half.”
Key Tactical Shifts Observed:
- High Press Stability: Dangmei, Pyari Xaxa and Manisha Kalyan (the trio of India’s forwards) ran themselves into the ground attempting to win possession in Germany’s half.
- Goalkeeping Success: Panthoi Chanu was solid under the bar. It was the way she organised the defence in the back four and made that key save in dying minutes to keep a clean sheet.
- Midfield Machine: Clustering Sangita Basfore and Martina Thokchom protectively around the backline helped shield the Goal-post while enabling quick transfer to the flanks.
The Turkey Tour:A Trial by Fire
Beating Hertha BSC is a key moment on a tough and gruelling tour. Blue Tigresses are in Türkiye since mid-January to play against some of the European clubs to get a feel of high intensity football.
It hasn’t been a smooth ride. The team commenced the tour disastrously by going down 0-2 against Ukrainian club FC Metalist 1925, before beating Switzerland’s FC Schlieren by a narrow margin of 2-1 and playing out a goalless draw with Spartak Moscow. This 1-0 win against Hertha is a fine springboard for the team who head for Australia on February 10.
The Road to Australia: The 2026 AFC Women’s Asian Cup Read More…
The competitive nature of these friendlies is fuelled by the continuing challenge posed by the AFC Women’s Asian Cup which will kick off in March 2026. India have been drawn in a tough Group C, alongside:
- Vietnam (March 4)
- Japan (March 7)
- Chinese Taipei (March 10)
This is a tactical decision to take on a German team such as Hertha BSC. European football is physical and direct, very similar to how things will be at the Asian Cup, especially when you play against sides like Japan. The victory in Antalya makes clear the Blue Tigresses are not simply “making up the numbers” anymore — they’re out to stay competitive.
Humanizing the Hustle: Inside a Star’s Lifestyle
Before you scroll past, we urge you to understand that they are a group of women who gave up months of being away from home, training in alien climates in pursuit of glory for Indian football. For players such as Manisha Kalyan, who has played in the UEFA Women’s Champions League, this is about bridging the domestic & international standard.
What Lies Ahead?
The work in Türkiye is not yet done. The Blue Tigresses have two very important games before they depart for Perth:
- 4 February: Vs Zvezda-2005 Perm (Russia)
- February 7 v FK Csíkszereda Miercurea Ciuc (Romania)
A victorious day draws to a close in Serik and the message from the Indian camp is loud and clear: Party has been kept short, eye on prize. The win 1-0 against Hertha BSC is nice, but the big goal still remains a historic run in the Australian outback come March.

