A stylish batter donning the number 18 with sublime cricketing shots. No, not Virat Kohli; we are writing about cricketer Smriti Mandhana, the smart left-handed opener of the Indian Women's Cricket team. Donning black sunglasses, a focused Mandhana, walked on for the Women in Blue for the very first time as a 16-year-old while her friends were sitting in classrooms contemplating their future.
The hot-handed teenager who was never interested in science or a probable career in hospitality.
But all she wanted to do was take the cricket bat and hit the ball out of the park. Smriti has shown an undying passion for cricket since her debut as a teenager. It has made her only the second Indian cricketer to feature in a foreign T20 league, score a World Cup century, and become one of the few cricketers to score a double ton in a List A game. In this Smriti Mandhana biography, you will get to know everything about her career, achievements, and more.
Cricketer Smriti Mandhana Info
| Name | Smriti Shriniwas Mandhana |
| Smriti Mandhana Age | 29 years |
| Smriti Mandhan Birthday | 18 July 1996 |
| Coach | Anant Tambvekar |
| Sport | Cricket |
| Siblings | Shravan Mandhana |
| Achievement | Rachael Heyhoe Flint Award for the ICC Women’s Cricketer of the Year for 2021. Youngest T20I captain for India. Won the International Woman Cricketer of the Year award 2019. ICC Rachael Heyhoe-Flint Award for the best female cricketer of the year 2018. ODI Player of the Year by the ICC 2018. Only Indian player to be named in the ICC Women’s Team of the Year 2016. |
| Smriti Mandhana crush | Kartik Aaryan |
| Smriti Mandhana Height | 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) |
| Weight | 55 kg |
| Gender | Female |
| Spouse | Unmarried |
| Smriti Mandhana awards | Arjuna Award for Cricket |
| Parent | Shrinivas Mandhana, Smita Mandhana |
| Hometown | Mumbai, Maharashtra |
| Smriti Mnadhana Networth | 34-40 crores |
| ODI debut | 10 April 2013 v Bangladesh |
| Test debut | 5 April 2013 v Bangladesh |
| ICC ranking | T20I rankings: 3rd |
| T20 | 5 April 2013 v Bangladesh |
| Batting style | Left-handed |
| Bowling style | Right-arm medium |
| Team played for | India Women, Brisbane Heat Women, Trailblazers, Western Storm, Hobart Hurricanes Women, India B Women |
| Smriti Mandhana’s Best score | 135 (ODI), 127 (TEST), 86 (T20) |
| Smriti Mandhana ICC ranking | 3rd (T20I) |
| Smriti Mandhana jersey number | 18 |
| Smriti Mandhana Cast | Marwari community |
| Alma mater | Bachelor’s in commerce from Chintaman Rao College of Commerce, Sangli, Maharashtra. |
| Smriti Mandhana zodiac sign | Cancer |
Smriti Mandhana Biography
Early Days
Credits: DNA India
She was born on the 18th of July in the city of dreams to Smita and Srinivas Mandhana. Her father, a former district player turned chemical distributor at a textile company, longed to see his incomplete dream through his children, Shravan and Smriti. When she was two years old, her family moved to Sangli.
It was Smriti's brother who started playing first. Smriti would accompany her father to watch him play at the U16s. While the brother scored runs and basked in local paper glory, the sister would cut and collect the clippings, thinking, “One day, I thought I should also be scoring runs like this.”
Her supportive father never said no to her. Whenever his brother went to the nets, Srinivas used to lob the cricket balls gently. However, Smriti hated the fact that her father used to throw the ball lightly. Soon her father started to bowl to her from 15 yards and noticed how well she hit the ball.
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Smriti Mandhana Career
At 9, Mandhana was picked for the Maharashtra U15 squad. However, she was boosted with confidence as bowlers older than her were used to the lineup to bowl to her. Her unfazed confidence convinced her father that she had a future in the sport.
However, long work hours meant he could not personally look after her training. And with sending her to either Mumbai or Bangalore not an option, Smriti used her savings to build a concrete pitch where she trained under the eyes of junior state coach Anant Tambwekar.
"I used to train in the morning, then go to school, and then have nets in the evening," she says. "Sometimes, if the teachers let me go early, I used to finish evening nets and then go home and watch TV," remembers Smriti.
Domestic career
By the time she turned 11, she was already a part of the Maharashtra Under-19 team. However, Smriti did not get a chance to start in the XI for the first two years. As she neared 15, she had a huge decision to make with the Class X boards fast approaching.
While Smriti wanted to pursue science, her mother put her foot down, knowing she could not balance both studies and cricket. A thankful Smriti could turn her complete focus on cricket, and her performances started to speak.
She scored three centuries and one unbeaten double century against Gujarat U 19 at Vadodara in the interstate U 19 one-day competition. Her 224 in 150 balls made her the first Indian woman with a double hundred in a first-class game.
Good scores continued in two following U19 limited-over tournaments, and within no time, Smriti was called up for the Challenger Trophy. In the 2016 Women's Challenger Trophy, she became the tournament's top scorer, scoring 192 runs, and helping her team to win the trophy by clinching 62* in the final against India Blue.
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Smriti Mandhana Cricketer | T20 Career
Many senior players were rested in the limited-over home series against Bangladesh after a disappointing World Cup campaign. And Smriti's sacrifices and her performances led to her first India call-up in 2013. She made her debut along with Sushma Verma and Poonam Yadav.
Incidentally, her debut match was being played on the same ground on which she had hit her double hundred. Opening the innings with Mona Meshram, Smriti scored 39 runs in 36 balls, giving India a decent start. Indian women went to win the match and clean sweep the visitors.
On 30th November 2014, Smriti scored her first international T20I half-century against South Africa in Bangalore. Her consistent performances meant she made her first Women's T20 World Championship appearance at just 18 years old.
In March 2018, she scored the fastest fifty against Australia in the women's Tri-Nation Series, taking just 30 balls to reach a half-century.
She was named in India’s team for the 2022 Women’s Cricket World Cup in New Zealand. She was also the vice-captain of India’s team for the cricket tournament at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England.
T20 Women’s World Championships
T20 WC 2014/16
While her friends from college were giving their XII board exams, Smriti was preparing herself to open the innings for the Women in Blue at the biggest stage in Bangladesh. However, cricketer Mandhana could not deliver her best. She finished the tournament with a mere total of 36 runs as India crashed out in the group stage.
In the following World Championships, Smriti's performances disappointed as Indian women failed to move out of the group stage. In 2018, Smriti had her best run in T20Is, scoring 622 runs in 23 innings with an average of 28.27. She scored five half-centuries and two hundred in 2018.
In the T20 World Cup 2023, India’s vice-captain Smriti Mandhana scored a brilliant half-century to guide the match against Ireland. She scored a career-best 87 off 56 balls.
T20 WC 2018
Going with her best form into the 2018 Women's World T20 Championships, West Indies cricketer Smriti Mandhana revealed her best T20 self. Mandhana opened with 26 against Pakistan and followed it up with a 33 against Ireland. Cricketer Mandhana then played an explosive Woman of the Match innings of 83 against Australia as India cruised to the semis.
While the Mithali Raj–Ramesh Powar controversy went on, on one hand, Smriti opened the innings with 34. However, post her departure, the middle order fell and broke down to English women for 112 runs. England chased it down quickly in 17 overs and knocked India out of the World T20 Championships.
Smriti Mandhana ODI Career
ODI debut
Cricketer Smriti Mandhana made her ODI debut, five days after her T20I debut. Smriti opened her ODI account with 25 off 35 balls against Bangladesh in Ahmedabad. Cricketer Mandhana scored her first half-century in her fourth ODI match against Sri Lanka at Vishakapatnam.
In the second ODI game of India's tour of Australia in 2016, Mandhana went on to score her maiden international hundred (102 runs off 109 balls). During the Women's World Cup match between the West Indies and Indian women, the stylish left-hander scored a 108-ball 106 to score her first century in a World Cup game.
Her contribution helped the Women in Blue to a comfortable victory. Today Smriti is one of the most crucial members of the Indian team. She has over 2,500 runs in just 74 games at an average of 42.52. Mandhana has 23 half-centuries and 5 ODI centuries. Incidentally, all her four centuries have come away from India, indicating how good a player she is. She became the first Indian female cricketer to score a century in both ODIs and Tests in Australia.
Smriti Mandhana Test Career
Smriti Mandhana at just 18 years and 29 days made her debut on the Indian Women’s Test Team.
She was 18 years and 29 days old when she made her Test debut in 2014. While she was touring England, her friends were sitting in classes at the Chintaman College in her hometown. After a decent score of 22 in the first innings, Smriti went on to score 50 in the second innings of her test debut.
That innings played a crucial hand in India's historic Test win in England in 2014, considering at least eight players made their Test debut. Indian women were playing a Test match after a gap of eight years, and it was only their second ever triumph over England.
"For a teenager playing in her first match to score 22 (in the first innings) and a fifty is remarkable," her brother Shravan said after the match. Personally, for Smriti, the tour changed things. "Whatever little doubts I had, vanished after the England tour," she says.
"That tour changed me as a cricketer. To score a fifty and win the Test, which was our first win in eight years, was extremely special. After that, we started getting more matches. So now, I'm thankful that my mother prevented me from choosing Science in school. I wouldn't have been able to manage, no way!"
She was also named in India’s Test squad for their one-off match against Australia in August 2021. In the first innings of the match, she scored her first century in Test cricket.
Smriti Mandhana in T2O League
Brisbane heat
In September 2016, Smriti Mandhana signed a one-year deal with the Brisbane Heat for the Women's Big Bash League (WBBL). In her first season with the Brisbane Heat, Mandhana scored 89 runs in 10 innings. Not the same Mandhana playing in India, right!
The reason behind that was Mandhana used to come down the order at number 5 or number 6 instead of opening. Mandhana returned to the Women's BBL in the 2018-19 season with the Hobart Hurricanes.
Hobart hurricanes
Playing higher in the order is Smriti's natural position, and the Hurricanes benefited from it. Smriti scored 318 runs in 13 matches at an average of 24.46 and a strike rate of 144.54. She finished as the second-highest run-scorer for the Hurricanes.
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Injury at WBBL
An injured Smriti during WBBL.
During a Women's Big Bash League game, she turned to her right to field a ball, and her left boot got stuck in the turf as the rest of her body twisted; she crumpled to the ground, clutching her left knee in pain. Smriti had ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament in the left knee.
Her WBBL was over, but the question on her mind was, Will I be fit in time for the World Cup? A surgery followed, and five months of intense rehab, which she mostly spent at the National Cricket Academy in Bengaluru.
"The NCA was closed on weekends, so there would be no one there to bowl to her. So I traveled to the NCA from Sangli on weekends to help her train", said Anant Tambwekar, her coach in Sangli. "She wanted to get as much practice as possible in the short time she had."
Smriti Mandhana in Women Premier League (WPL)
Image Source- India Today
In the inaugural WPL auction 2023, Smriti Mandhana was bought by Royal Challengers Bangalore for ₹3.4 crores. She was the highest bid in that auction and was also named the captain of Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the WPL 2023.
Smriti led RCB to their first WPL title in 2024 and second title in 2026. In WPL 2026, Mandhana also scored the most runs (377 in 9 matches) in the tournament and won the orange cap. Her best score in WPL is 96 runs.
Smriti Mandhana at World Cup
2017 World Cup
She started her 2017 World Cup journey with a bang. Mandhana was “the player of the match" for 90 against England in the first of the group matches. She scored her second ODI hundred (106 not out) against West Indies.
Smriti Mandhana has evolved as a player in recent times and has been the most consistent performer for the Indian team. With an eye on the future, India might look at Smriti Mandhana as the team's captain.
Smriti Mandhana missed the World Cup Qualifier and the Quadrangular Series in South Africa due to injury. She began the 2017 World Cup with a 90 against England in the first of the group matches. Mandhana helped her team win by 35 runs and was named the player of the match. She scored her second ODI hundred (106 not out) against West Indies.
Mandhana was part of the Indian team to reach the final of the 2017 Women's Cricket World Cup, where the team lost to England by nine runs.
2022 World Cup
Smriti Mandhana scored her fifth ODI century and smashed 123 off 118 balls, including 12 boundaries and two sixes against the West Indies at the 2022 Women’s World Cup.
2023 World Cup
Smriti Mandhana was the vice captain of the Indian women’s team in the T20 World Cup 2023. She scored a brilliant half-century to guide the match against Ireland. She scored a career-best 87 off 56 balls.
2025 World Cup
Smriti had a historic run at the 2025 ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup and helped India lift the trophy for the first time. She was the highest run-scorer for India in the tournament. Smriti scored 434 runs across 9 innings. She even broke Mithali Raj’s 2017 record of 409 runs to become the highest Indian run-getter in a single edition of the Women’s ODI World Cup.
Smriti Mandhana Family
Image Credits: Instagram
Smriti Mandhana was born to Smita and Srinivas Mandhana. Two years after her birth, the family shifted to Sangali, where both her father and brother Sharavan played cricket. After a brief period of district cricket, her father got a job as a chemical distributor at a textile company.
However, he longed to see his incomplete dream through his children. It was Shravan who started to play cricket first. Inspired by her brothers' performances at the state U 16 tournaments, Smriti also picked up the bat at the age of six. Shravan made it to the Maharashtra U19s before opting for academics.
While he is now employed in a private bank, Shravan played a vital role in Smriti's early career. He inspired her to take up cricket. Furthermore, it was her elder brother's gift bat that brought good luck and fortune during Smriti's double hundred. Shravan, while playing for the U19s, approached Rahul Dravid and told him about Smriti's passion. A humble Dravid signed his training bat and sent it to Smriti.
"I have been scoring very well since the time I started playing with Dravid sir's bat. My brother met Dravid during his visit to Bangalore last year and told him about my passion for cricket," she said after her record-breaking innings. Dravid gifted his practice bat to me, and since then I have been playing with it," Smriti adds.
"It has been a wonderful spell since then as I made my ODI and T20 debut this year with the same bat," she says. Smriti's father never said no to her while encouraging her. He was the first to notice Smriti's talent when he started her bowling from 15 yards.
Smriti's mother also played a crucial role. When Smriti wanted to pick science, Smita made her understand she would not be able to balance both cricket and studies. Mandhana went on to study commerce and soon graduated with a BCom from Chintaman Rao College of Commerce in Sangli. Today, Smita is in charge of Smriti's diet, clothing, and other organizational aspects.
Smriti Mandhana Awards
| Year | Award | |
| 2016 | Only Indian in ICC Women's Team of the Year 2016 | |
| 2017 | Youth Sports Icon of Excellence Award | |
| 2017 | Vogue Sportsperson of the Year | |
| 2017 | BBC’s Top 100 Women | |
| 2017 | Wisden Leading Woman Cricketer in the World | |
| 2018 | Women's ODI Player of the Year | |
| 2018 | Women's Cricketer of the Year | |
| 2018 | Rachael Heyhoe-Flint Award | |
| 2019 | Arjuna Award | |
| 2019 | Navbharat Times Awards | |
| 2020 |
| |
| 2021 | Rachael Heyhoe Flint Award for the ICC Women’s Cricketer of the Year | |
| 2022 | Rachael Heyhoe-Flint Award for the ICC Women’s Cricketer of the Year. |
Smriti Mandhana Career Stats
| Format | Match | Innings | Runs | Highest Score | Avg | SR | 100s | 50s |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WTests | 8 | 14 | 635 | 149 | 48.84 | 63.37 | 2 | 3 |
| WODIs | 120 | 120 | 5411 | 136 | 47.88 | 90.36 | 14 | 35 |
| WT20Is | 164 | 158 | 4293 | 112 | 30.02 | 124.61 | 1 | 33 |
Smriti Mandhana unknown facts
- She idolizes Matthew Hayden and Kumar Sangakkara.
- Smriti played with a bat gifted by Rahul Dravid when she scored an unbeaten 224 in the West Zone U-19 Cricket League against Gujarat.
- She wears the same number of jerseys (18) as Virat Kohli.
- Smriti is the brand ambassador for the POWER brand of Bata.
- She is a big fan of fellow cricketer Jhulan Goswami and looks up to her as a role model.
- Smriti was named in the 2019 Forbes Top 30 Under 30 for her exceptional performance.
- She has also played for the Brisbane Heat and Hobart Hurricanes in the Women's Big Bash League, Australia.
- Smriti also has played in the Women's Super League for the Western Storm
- She started 2019 being the top-ranked batswoman in ICC's rankings.
- It was Smriti's brother who inspired her to take up cricket at the age of 6.
- She was the only Indian batter to be named to the ICC Women's team of the year.
- Her first ODI century was against Australia in Hobart, where she knocked a bunch of 102 runs.
- Mandhana was the first Indian woman to score a double hundred in a one-day game, playing for Maharashtra against Gujarat in October 2013.
- She is the 2nd Indian cricketer to sign a 1-year deal with the Brisbane Heat for the Women's Big Bash League, following Indian skipper Harmanpreet Kaur.
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Smriti Mandhana: Social Media
FAQ’s
Who is Smriti Mandana Boyfriend?Smriti Mandhana dated singer/composer Palash Mucchal, but the two broke up right before the wedding. As of now Smriti is single and focused on cricket.
Does Smriti Mandhana eat non-veg?Smriti Mandhana is a vegetarian. To include protein in her diet, she eats a lot of soybeans and protein shakes.
How much does Smriti Mandhana earn?Smriti Mandhana reportedly has an annual earning of 2-5 crores. Her net worth is around 34-40 crores.
What is Smriti Mandhana’s playing style?Mandhana is known for her aggressive and attacking style of play. As an opening batter, she often takes on the opposition bowlers right from the start, making her a dynamic and impactful player.
When was Smriti Mandhana born?Indian cricketer Smriti Mandhana was born on July 18, 1996, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
