Smriti Mandhana Creates History-There are those who play the game, and then there are players who reshape it. So too has Smriti Mandhana. On a warm Sunday evening on Thiruvananthapuram, the Indian vice-captain not only made runs, she carved her name into the heavens of cricket legends. In joining the 10,000-run club in international cricket, Mandhana has become fastest woman ever to do so, past greats of the game and her driving through covers.
The milestone was reached during the fourth T20I against Sri Lanka at the Greenfield International Stadium. Requiring 27 runs to join the elite “10K Club,” Mandhana got there in the seventh over of their fixture. In the process, she became only the second Indian woman and fourth overall in the world to do so after the legendary Mithali Raj.
Racing Through the Magic of Numbers and Legend
But what makes Mandhana’s feat so breathtaking is simply the speed of her ascent. Reaching 10,000 runs is testament to longevity; it is indeed the testament of hitting that mark faster than anyone who has played before you.
The 23-year-old Mandhana got to the five-figure mark in her 281st innings. To illustrate that, she broke the previous record (formerly held by her former captain Mithali Raj, who hit 7000 in 291 innings) in style. The game’s all-time greats England’s Charlotte Edwards (308 innings) and New Zealand’s Suzie Bates (314 innings) re now left behind in the wake of the Indian southpaw’s record-breaking course.
Coincidence in the life of Mandhana Girls – Career over heartbreaks!
A Year of Unprecedented Brilliance
If 2025 had a book, it would have just one writer: Smriti Mandhana. The new record represents the pinnacle of a calendar year in which she has decimated bowling attacks around the world. This winter, she was a key force in helping to bring India their first-ever Women’s ODI World Cup title on home soil, a victory which changed the tectonic plates of Indian sport.
There is little other way to put it, but Haynes was Kohli-like with the bat in 2025. By the end of the year, she was also the highest run-scorer in ODIs with 1,362 and an incredible five centuries. In the same series that she broke the 10,000-run barrier, she also became the first Indian female cricketer to score 4,000 runs in T20I cricket. Whether it is the patient grind of a Test, or the explosive demands of the format’s shortest version, Mandhana has shown she is mistress of everything.
The Art of Mandhana’s Batting
Statistics can tell you what she accomplished, but they rarely put into perspective how she did it. There is a sense of classical beauty in watching Mandhana bat. In an age of “power-hitting” and “360-degree cricket”, the unorthodox shot, Smriti is a purist’s delight.
Her high elbow, the swing of tempo, and that trademark lofted drive over extra-cover are all throwbacks to another age but she wields them with a modern-day steeliness. She gets not just past the fielder; she outdoes the spirit of opposition. Her opening partnership with Shafali Verma has blossomed into the most feared pairing in world cricket, Mandhana filling the role of the surgeon to Shafali’s crude brute trauma.
She flexed this manifest form in the record-breaking game against Sri Lanka by clobbering 80 off only 48 balls, and though she’s always chasing milestones, you get the sense that she’ll never lose sight of what her team needs: momentum.
Keeping the Flame for the Next Generation
For the longest time, Mithali Raj was Indian women’s cricket’s lone beacon. When she retired, the question loomed of who would fill that considerable void. Smriti Mandhana has not only carried the torch; she has turned it into a bonfire.
The 29-year-old is in the prime of her career. With upwards of 10,000 runs in the bank and a World Cup trophy parked in her cabinet, the conversation is no longer whether she is “a great” player but where she sits among the greatest ever to play the game, irrespective of gender. She is a cultural icon in India and she has inspired millions of young girls to believe that cricket is not just a “gentleman’s game” — it’s anyone’s game if you have the heart.For too long, we as Ireland women looked up at cricketing nations like male bowerbirds and tried to emulate them.
What’s In Store: The Chase for the All-Time Mark
Now that the 10,000- run hump has been crossed, world cricket is already eyeing the next peak. Mithali Raj’s record 10,868 international runs is now well within Mandhana’s reach. By her current form and the number of matches she plays, it’s a matter of when not if she becomes the highest run-scorer ever in women’s cricket”.
With the WPL (India’s women super league) imminent, she bears the burden of billion hopes as she gears up to lead Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the upcoming season. But if her career has showed us anything, it’s that she excels under pressure. She doesn’t merely meet the moment; she owns it.
The age of Smriti Mandhana is not only upon us — it’s being scripted in gold at the moment.

