From cricket and chess to football, boxing, and para sports, how Indian women athletes reshaped global sport

Last year, something quietly irreversible happened in Indian sport. Across cricket stadiums, chess halls, football pitches, boxing rings, and para arenas, Indian women stopped being stories of promise and became stories of proof. They didn’t wait for better systems, louder applause, or perfect conditions. They showed up anyway, and won. What followed wasn’t just a collection of medals or firsts, but a visible shift in how Indian women in sports are seen, funded, and believed in. This wasn’t a breakthrough moment. It was the beginning of a new normal.
Why Last Year Changed Indian Women Sports Forever

There are years when sport feels loud. And then there are years when it feels inevitable. (Image courtesy: assettype)
Last year was the latter.
It didn’t arrive with a single defining headline or one viral clip. Instead, it unfolded quietly and then all at once; across chessboards and cricket grounds, football pitches and boxing rings, para tracks and training centres that once barely made the news. By the time the year settled into history, one truth became undeniable: Indian women were no longer asking for space in sport. They had taken it, and reshaped it.
This wasn’t about representation.
It was about ownership.
The World Cup That Changed the Room for Indian Women
When the Indian women’s cricket team lifted their first-ever ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup last year, it marked more than a historic win. It reset the room.
For decades, women’s cricket in India lived on the margins; limited broadcasts, modest contracts, and careers powered more by belief than backing. Players travelled economy, trained without spotlight, and played for pride long before paychecks caught up.
From Limited Resources to Global Recognition

Many of these players, Smriti Mandhana included, grew up in households where sport wasn’t a career plan, just a stubborn dream. Mandhana’s early years were shaped by repetition, discipline, and sacrifice, not endorsements or privilege. Last year, she became the fastest Indian woman to cross 10,000 international runs, anchoring a team that finally commanded national attention. (Image courtesy: indiasportshub)
That World Cup win didn’t just inspire young girls. It recalibrated respect.
Chessboards, Not Shortcuts: Indian Women Redefine Mind Sports
If cricket was the roar, chess was the quiet domination.
Indian women didn’t arrive at the top of global chess through shortcuts or legacy systems. They arrived through obsession, discipline, and long hours spent thinking their way forward.
Divya Deshmukh and the Rise of Indian Women in Global Chess

Divya Deshmukh’s ascent reads like modern sporting folklore. No elite European academy. No generational privilege. Just raw intellect, family support, and relentless work. Last year, she became the first Indian woman to win the FIDE Women’s World Cup, earning the Grandmaster title outright.
In a sport long dominated by men, and historically controlled by Europe, her victory felt seismic. Indian women weren’t just participating in thinking sports anymore. They were defining the global standard.
From school halls to international boards, gender stopped being a barrier and became just another statistic rewritten.
Indian Women’s Football Finds Its Voice on the Asian Stage
Women’s football in India has rarely enjoyed ideal conditions. Sparse funding. Limited visibility. Fragile grassroots systems.
Yet last year, the national women’s team didn’t wait for perfection. They qualified for the AFC Women’s Asian Cup on merit.
Qualification, Record Wins, and Long-Overdue Legitimacy

Along the way, they delivered a 13–0 win against Mongolia, India’s biggest AFC victory ever. Most players on that squad trained on uneven pitches, balanced education or employment, and chased football because it offered freedom, not security.
Their qualification wasn’t just about goals scored. It was about legitimacy earned.
Where Limits Were Redefined in Para Sports
If one space permanently altered how Indian sport understands ability, it was para sport.
Here, Indian women didn’t just break stereotypes. They erased them.
Sheetal Devi and the New Meaning of Ability in Indian Sport

Sheetal Devi’s journey defies easy summaries. Born without arms, she taught herself archery using her feet, shoulders, and jaw; without precedent or blueprint. Last year, she became a world champion. Soon after, she competed alongside able-bodied archers at national trials. (Image courtesy: ndtvimg)
Her achievements were never framed by sympathy but by precision.
Alongside her, athletes like Deepthi Jeevanji delivered global medals, reinforcing a truth now impossible to ignore: disability in Indian sport is no longer about limitation. It is about adaptation, excellence, and respect.
Power, Precision, and Punch: Indian Women in Boxing
In boxing rings across the world, Indian women emerged as the backbone of medal tallies. At the World Boxing Cup Finals last year, they secured multiple golds, often outperforming expectations and better-funded opponents.
When Skill Beat Privilege in the Global Ring

Many of these boxers come from working-class backgrounds where sport was seen as risk, not reward. They fought, literally, against financial pressure, social resistance, and limited access. (Image courtesy: indianexpress)
What carried them forward wasn’t privilege.
It was a skill sharpened by hunger.
Why This Was Never Just a Year for Indian Women in Sports
What made last year extraordinary wasn’t just the medals or the firsts. It was the pattern it created.
Across disciplines, Indian women succeeded not in spite of adversity, but because they learned how to survive it. They didn’t wait for systems to evolve. They bent them and forced them to catch up.
From Representation to Ownership

The ripple effects are already visible in grassroots participation, in sponsorship priorities, and in the way women’s sport is finally discussed without qualifiers. (Image courtesy: thebridge)
The girl watching from a small town today doesn’t just see champions anymore. She sees proof. Proof that talent doesn’t need permission. Proof that money helps, but belief lasts longer. And it is also proof that Indian women don’t need to enter men’s fields, they can redefine them entirely.
Last year didn’t crown queens. It revealed architects. And Indian women are no longer building quietly. They are shaping the future of sport; openly, unapologetically, and for good.
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