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Shafali Verma

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indian cricketer (born 2004)

Shefali Verma
Verma at the2020 T20 World Cup
Personal information
Born (2004-01-28)28 January 2004 (age 22)
Rohtak,Haryana, India
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-armoff-break
RoleBatter
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 86)16 June 2021 v England
Last Test14 December 2023 v England
ODI debut (cap 131)27 June 2021 v England
Last ODI2 November 2025 v South Africa
ODI shirt no.17
T20I debut (cap 64)24 September 2019 v South Africa
Last T20I23 February 2023 v Australia
T20I shirt no.17
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2017/18–presentHaryana
2019–2022Velocity
2021Birmingham Phoenix
2021/22Sydney Sixers
2023–presentDelhi Capitals
Career statistics
CompetitionWTestWODIWT20I
Matches53185
Runs scored5677412045
Batting average63.0024.724.95
100s/50s1/30/50/10
Top score2058781
Balls bowled-126102
Wickets-310
Bowling average-37.3318.80
5 wickets in innings-00
10 wickets in match-00
Best bowling-2/363/15
Catches/stumpings3/07/–27/–
Source:ESPNcricinfo,23 February 2023

Shafali Verma (born 28 January 2004) is an Indiancricketer who plays for theIndian women's national cricket team.[1][2][3] In 2019, at the age of 15, she became the youngest cricketer to play in aWomen's Twenty20 International (T20I) match for India.[4] In June 2021, she became the youngest player, male or female, to represent India in all three formats of international cricket.[5] On 8 October 2022, she became the youngest cricketer to complete 1,000 runs in T20 Internationals. Under her captaincy, India won the2023 Under-19 Women's T20 World Cup. She was named as Player of the Match in thefinals of the2025 Women's Cricket World Cup.

Early life and education

[edit]

Verma was born inRohtak,Haryana,[6] to father Sanjeev Verma[6] and mother Parveen Bala.[7] She has an older brother, Sahil,[6][7] and a younger sister, Nancy[8] (or Nensi[7]). All three of them play cricket.[7] Her father, "[a] die-hard cricket fan"[6] who was unable to pursue cricket as a profession due to family pressure,[7] is the proprietor of a small jewellery shop.[6][7]

Verma began playing cricket at the age of eight. Her brother, a leg spinner, and her father would take her to a local ground to practise in thenets.[9] In 2019, she toldHindustan Times:

"Both would bowl for long hours and I would hit the ball hard. That’s where I learnt this rule – if the ball is there to be hit then it should be hit hard."[9]

Verma's father is a fan of "cricketing god"[7]Sachin Tendulkar, and often watched videos of Tendulkar's innings with Verma and her brother. Tendulkar also became Verma's idol.[7]

In late 2013, Verma went, for the first time, toChaudhary Bansi Lal Cricket Stadium in Lahli, a small town near Rohtak, with her father to seeMumbai playing aRanji Trophy group fixture againstHaryana.[6][7] There, with Verma sitting on her father's shoulder, they watched Tendulkar featuring in his final domestic match;[6][7] Verma cheered every time her idol scored.[7]

At around that time, Verma's father took steps to enrol her in a cricket academy in Rohtak.[6]

Initially, all of the Rohtak academies refused to admit Verma, because she was a girl.[10] Eventually, on her father's instructions, she cut her hair short,[6][10] and disguised herself as her brother.[6] The two siblings looked alike and had similar hairstyles.[9] Then, her father enrolled her, as a boy, in the Shree Ram Narain Cricket Academy.[6][10]

Verma's father later toldThe Times of India that he had been scared someone would notice she was really a girl, but that no one had. "Nau saal ke umar mein saare bachche ek jaise hi lagte hain" ("At the age of nine, all children look the same"), he continued.[10]

In 2020, Verma's first coach, Ashwani Kumar, a former Haryanafirst class cricketer who runs the academy, recounted:

"When she came to me first as a little kid ... I taught her the basic stance and after few days, she was comfortable hitting the big strokes. Then she started training with the girls four years elder to her and in six months’ times, she was practising with the U-14 boys. She never felt out of place."[11]

Despite her successes at training, Verma had to endure mocking and taunts from neighbours and relatives about her involvement in a game they considered to be for boys. In response, she told her father that one day they would all be chanting her name.[7][10]

Verma was also not permitted to compete in the Academy's male-only tournaments. According to her father, "the organisers felt that she would get hurt,"[6] and so she further trained under his supervision instead.[6] Verma also disguised herself as her brother once again when he was unable to participate in an U-12 cricket tournament due to illness.[9] TheHindustan Times later observed that "Shafali ... played the entire tournament as Sahil ... amazing knocks in the 10-overs-a-side matches and even won the Player of the Tournament award."[9]

Turning out against boys was still not ideal for Verma, however. According to her father:

"It was not easy for her to play against the boys as she often used to get hit on the helmet. On a few occasions, the ball even smashed her helmet grill. I used to get worried but she never gave up."[10]

A solution presented itself when Verma began her secondary education in Class V at St. Paul School, Rohtak.[7][10] The school's principal, Kalvinder Sidhu, was impressed by her enthusiasm and zeal for cricket, and asked the school coach Sunil Vats to establish a cricket academy for girls. Verma was less successful in the classroom, and failed her Class X exams. She then moved to Class X at Mandeep Senior Secondary School, Rohtak, which is run by the same management. As of 2019, she was hoping to re-sit the exams but was very busy playing cricket.[7]

Career

[edit]

Before international cricket, she played for Velocity in the Women's T20 Challenge in which she scored 34 runs in 31 balls.[12] In September 2019, she was named in India'sWomen's Twenty20 International (WT20I) squad for their seriesagainst South Africa.[13] She made her WT20I debut for India at the age of fifteen, againstSouth Africa, on 24 September 2019.[14] She was the youngest player to play for India in a T20I match,[15] and in November 2019against the West Indies, became the youngest half-centurion for India in international cricket.[16][17] Against the West Indies, she scored 158 runs in five matches, and was named the player of the series.[18]

In January 2020, she was named in India's squad for the2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup in Australia,[19] and was awarded with a central contract by theBoard of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).[20] Ahead of the2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup, she was ranked as the number one batter in women's T20I cricket.[21]

In May 2021, she was named in India'sTest andWomen's One Day International (WODI) squads for their series against theEngland women's cricket team.[22][23] Verma made her Test debut on 16 June 2021, for India againstEngland,[24] scoring 96 runs in her first Test innings.[25] The Test match was drawn, and Verma was named the player of the match after scoring 159 runs in her two innings.[26][27] Verma made her WODI debut for India, against England, on 27 June 2021.[28] She was signed byBirmingham Phoenix for thefirst season ofThe Hundred.[29]

In July 2021, she played in India's tour of England. In the one-off Test, she was named thePlayer of the Match, scoring a 96 off 152 in the first innings then a 63 off 83 in the second. In the first ODI, she scored 15 off 14, then a crucial 44 off 55 in the second. In the third and last ODI, she scored 19 off 29. In the first T20, she was bowled off the second ball of the innings. In the second T20, she scored 48. In the third and final T20, she was once again bowled in the first over. She was the high scorer in Tests of the series, 7th in the ODIs, and finally 7th in T20s.

She played forSydney Sixers in the2021 WBBL, where she scored her maiden fifty againstHobart Hurricanes.[30] In January 2022, she was named in India's team for the2022 Women's Cricket World Cup in New Zealand.[31] In July 2022, she was named in India's team for thecricket tournament at the2022 Commonwealth Games inBirmingham, England.[32]

In the 2023 Women's Premier League Auction, she was sold to Delhi Capitals for Rs 2 crore.[33] In her first match againstRoyal Challengers Bangalore, she scored her maiden fifty, scoring 84 runs in just 45 balls.

In July 2024, she participated in a one-off test between India andSouth Africa. She scored 205 off 197, forming a 292 opening partnership (see below).

She was named in the India squad for the2024 ICC Women's T20 World Cup[34] and their homeODI series against New Zealand in October 2024.[35]

She played a pivotal role in the 2025 ICC Women's World Cup victory. Brought in to replace an injured Pratika Rawal in the semi-final game against Australia, Shafali shone with her performance in the final against South Africa, top-scoring with 84 off 78 balls, setting the tone for a respectable total of 298 that India eventually compiled in their quota of 50 overs. She also rolled her arm over when defending the total and took two crucial wickets at an important juncture of the decider, to be adjudged the Player of the Match.


Fastest Women's Test Double Century

[edit]

Shafali became the second Indian after former captainMithali Raj to score a double century in Test cricket, nearly 22 years after Raj's feat. Mithali had scored 214 off 407 balls during the drawn second Test againstEngland atTaunton in August 2002.Throughout her aggressive innings, she struck an impressive 23 fours and eight sixes. She reached her milestone with back-to-back sixes off off-spinnerDelmi Tucker, followed by a single. Her brilliant knock finally came to an end when she was run out for 205 off 197 balls.[36]

Playing style

[edit]

Verma is a right-handedopeningbatter with a prominent bat-swing who occasionally bowls right armoffbreaks.[1][8] Mithali Raj, who later captained her in both domestic and international matches, first watched her playing in a domestic match betweenHaryana andRailways, during which Verma scored a half century. In mid 2024, Raj told Lavanya Lakshmi Narayanan, writing forSportstar:

"She was a bit one-dimensional back then. She would score primarily on theonside. But she had raw power for a youngster."[37]

In the same article, Narayanan observed:

"Starting out, Shafali was a twitchy teenager at thecrease, constantly moving around in trying to find a way to dispatch the ball out of the ground. This also threw up errors in judgement ofline and length at times which triggered adismissal."[37]

Early in her international career, Verma was noted to have "big-hitting prowess", a "fearless approach" and a "love" of 'playing in the V'[11] (i.e. hitting tobetween long-off and long-on).[38] She was also said to have acover drive "from the book."[8] According to Narayanan, she still had, as of 2024, "... the image of a trigger-happysix hitter ... [with a] quintessentialHaryanvi swagger ... [and an] unfiltered quality."[37] However, Narayanan also wrote:

"Much has changed about this Rohtak-born batter in her nascent career. She has learnt to expand her striking arc, worked onrunning between the wickets and a nagging weakness for theshort ball, and even her hairstyles."[37]

Verma herself said in mid 2021 that she tries "... to take lessons from every series and keep improving as a cricketer."[39] She had also, she said, been encouraged by all of her national team-mates, coaches and support staff. During theCOVID-19 pandemic, her coach Ashwini Kumar set up nets and a bowling machine for her in his backyard, so that she could have supplementary batting training. Additionally, in early 2021, she attended a training camp with the Haryana men's team, at which she was given assistance with herback-foot game, and in dealing withbouncers.[39]

In March 2024, after leading her Capitals team to victory with a half century in a WPL match, Verma commented that she had changed a few things and felt more stable at the crease. Having previously struggled with consistency, she had learned from her Capitals captain,Meg Lanning, to score better, build her innings better, and bat longer. She also felt able to hit her shots clearly, and find gaps in thefield, although she did not elaborate.[40]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abESPNcricinfo staff."Shafali Verma Profile - Cricket Player India | Stats, Records, Video".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved27 July 2024.
  2. ^"Shafali Verma, the tomboy teen who could be India's next cricket superstar".Gulf News. 18 September 2019. Retrieved24 September 2019.
  3. ^"Women's T20 World Cup: Shafali Verma, India's 16-year-old 'rock star'".BBC Sport. 4 March 2020. Retrieved4 March 2020.
  4. ^"20 women cricketers for the 2020s".The Cricket Monthly. Retrieved24 November 2020.
  5. ^"Shafali Verma Becomes Youngest Indian Cricketer To Play All 3 Formats".NDTV. Retrieved27 June 2021.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmAcharya, Shayan (18 February 2020)."Women's T20 World Cup: Rohtak to Sydney, the journey of Shafali Verma".Sportstar.The Hindu.Archived from the original on 18 February 2020. Retrieved25 July 2024.
  7. ^abcdefghijklmnDani, Bipin (17 November 2019)."The Young Goddess of Cricket world".The Asian Age.Archived from the original on 30 November 2021. Retrieved26 July 2024.
  8. ^abcLokapally, Vijay (6 March 2020)."T20 World Cup: Shafali — the Viru of women's cricket".The Hindu.Archived from the original on 7 March 2020. Retrieved25 July 2024.
  9. ^abcdeGupta, Shalini (22 November 2019)."Newsmaker: Meet the 15-year-old who broke Sachin Tendulkar's record".Hindustan Times.Archived from the original on 22 November 2019. Retrieved26 July 2024.
  10. ^abcdefgRaj, Pratyush (3 October 2019)."India's youngest T20I debutante trained as a boy as no Rohtak academy would admit girls".The Times of India.Archived from the original on 3 October 2019. Retrieved25 July 2024.
  11. ^abScroll Staff (30 March 2020)."The rise of Shafali Verma: Coaches recount how 16-year-old impressed with her talent from early on".Scroll.in. Retrieved25 July 2024.
  12. ^"Shafali Verma: Star in a Prodigy's Age, June 24 2021".Yorker World. Retrieved24 June 2021.[dead link]
  13. ^"Fifteen-year-old Shafali Verma gets maiden India call-up".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved5 September 2019.
  14. ^"1st T20I (N), South Africa Women tour of India at Surat, Sep 24 2019".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved24 September 2019.
  15. ^"Hadlee's nine-for".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved13 November 2019.
  16. ^"Shafali Verma, India's 15-year-old prodigy".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved10 November 2019.
  17. ^"India's Shafali Verma, 15, becomes youngest player to score a fifty for country".BBC Sport. 10 November 2019. Retrieved12 November 2019.
  18. ^"Jemimah, Veda help IND blank WI 5-0 in T20Is".Women's CricZone. Archived fromthe original on 10 December 2019. Retrieved21 November 2019.
  19. ^"Kaur, Mandhana, Verma part of full strength India squad for T20 World Cup".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved12 January 2020.
  20. ^"Fifteen-year-old Shafali Verma awarded BCCI contract".International Cricket Council. Retrieved17 January 2020.
  21. ^"Celebrating up and coming cricketers this International Youth Day".International Cricket Council. Retrieved12 August 2020.
  22. ^"India's Senior Women squad for the only Test match, ODI & T20I series against England announced".Board of Control for Cricket in India. Retrieved14 May 2021.
  23. ^"England v India: Shafali Verma & Indrani Roy in touring squad".BBC Sport. 15 May 2021. Retrieved16 May 2021.
  24. ^"Only Test, Bristol, Jun 16 - 19 2021, India Women tour of England".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved16 June 2021.
  25. ^"India collapse after Verma's 96".BBC Sport. Retrieved18 June 2021.
  26. ^"Rana heroics deny England as India tail bats out the final day".International Cricket Council. Retrieved20 June 2021.
  27. ^"From T20 super star to Test opener: How Shafali Verma stamped her authority in the longer format".Women's CricZone. Archived fromthe original on 3 December 2022. Retrieved22 June 2021.
  28. ^"1st ODI, Bristol, Jun 27 2021, India Women tour of England".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved27 June 2021.
  29. ^"The Hundred 2021 - full squad lists".BBC Sport. Retrieved2 February 2022.
  30. ^Quint, The (13 May 2021)."Shafali Verma Set for First Women's BBL Stint With Sydney Sixers".TheQuint. Retrieved23 October 2021.
  31. ^"Renuka Singh, Meghna Singh, Yastika Bhatia break into India's World Cup squad".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved6 January 2022.
  32. ^"Team India (Senior Women) squad for Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games announced".Board of Control for Cricket in India. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  33. ^Tripathi, Prabal, ed. (17 February 2023)."wpl-auction-2023-shafali-verma-sold-delhi-capitals-price".Sprotstar. Retrieved17 February 2023.
  34. ^"India's squad for the ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2024 announced".Board of Control for Cricket in India. Retrieved3 October 2024.
  35. ^"India's Squad for IDFC First Bank ODI Series against New Zealand announced". BCCI. Retrieved9 November 2024.
  36. ^"Shafali Verma Smashes Fastest Women's Test Double Century Against South Africa". Time of India. Retrieved28 June 2024.
  37. ^abcdNarayanan, Lavanya Lakshmi (17 July 2024)."Shades of Shafali Verma: How the Haryana rockstar manages to stay authentic in a world that wants her to change".Sportstar. The Hindu. Retrieved27 July 2024.
  38. ^Laha, Somshuvra (3 March 2021)."Lessons from changing conditions: Play the line, play in the V".Hindustan Times. Retrieved27 July 2024.
  39. ^abGhosh, Annesha (31 May 2021)."Shafali Verma: 'I played 150 bouncers at a time, practising the same thing over and over again'".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved27 July 2024.
  40. ^Kishore, Shashank (14 March 2024)."New and improved Shafali has brought method to her madness".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved27 July 2024.

External links

[edit]

Media related toShafali Verma at Wikimedia Commons

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