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SA vs IND LIVE Score, Women's ODI Tri-Series 2025: India aims to confirm final berth against South Africa

SA vs IND LIVE Score, Women's ODI Tri-Series 2025: India aims to confirm final berth against South Africa

The Hindu07-05-2025

Hello and welcome to Sportstar's live coverage of the Women's ODI Tri-Series match between India and South Africa in Colombo.
We'll bring you toss updates from the match shortly.
IND-W vs SA-W LIVE STREAMING INFO
The Women's ODI Tri-Series 2025 match between India and Sri Lanka will be streamed live on the FanCode app and website from 10 AM IST. However, the match will not be televised live in India.
PREVIEW
India will be eager to bounce back from its loss against Sri Lanka and confirm its spot in the final when it faces a struggling South African side in the women's Tri-series in Colombo on Wednesday.
Harmanpreet Kaur and her team saw its eight-match winning streak come to an end on Sunday with a rare defeat to host Sri Lanka.
While India is still well-placed to reach the final -- thanks to a superior net run rate of 0.433 built on dominant performances in its opening two games -- it will look to seal it with a convincing win on Wednesday.
The 'Women in Blue' are perched on top of the points table, having earned four points from three outings. They are ahead of second-placed Sri Lanka, which also has four points but an inferior NRR of -0.166, while winless South Africa is last although the Proteas women have played a game less.
Read the full preview here

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As Temba Bavuma strolled the Lord's outfield on Saturday afternoon, the mace in one hand and young son Lihle in his other arm, a sea of emotion would have swirled through his mind. Just moments previously, he had helped end years of heartbreak, masterminding an extraordinary five-wicket conquest of Australia in the final of the World Test Championship. Bavuma wasn't just the captain of the all-conquering South African team, he was its leader in every sense of the word. It wasn't just redemption time for the Proteas, but also vindication of Bavuma's faith in himself, of the establishment's faith in him. There are certain tags that simply refuse to go away. They surface without warning, and then develop a life of their own, mushrooming beyond imagination to stick like an unrelenting leech. Most of these labels are negative, insulting even. Until 14 June 2025, South Africa were saddled with the unflattering tag of 'chokers'. No more, not ever. 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History made at the Home of… — Proteas Men (@ProteasMenCSA) June 14, 2025 As in such instances, South Africa had numerous heroes – not just in the final, but throughout the campaign. Their bowling superstar was the outrageously gifted and unassuming Kagiso Rabada, who came into the title clash with a cloud hanging over his head. Rabada had just served out a one-month ban (during IPL 2025) after testing positive for a banned recreational drug. He admirably took responsibility for his action, but he was also convinced that as silly as that might have been, it would not define him. He got down to business emphatically, with five wickets in Australia's first innings and four in the second. If Marco Jansen had been his ally the first time around, then it was Lungi Ngidi who became his partner in crime in the second dig, breaking the game open with the scalps of Smith, first-innings top-scorer Beau Webster and Cummins. On their way to Lord's, South Africa had eked out performances from so many – Ryan Rickelton and Tristan Stubbs and David Beddingham and Wiaan Mulder, and also from the superb left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj, who wept unashamedly after victory had been achieved. There was Markram, yes, but few shone brighter than Bavuma, him of the hamstring strain of the final which didn't prevent him from helping Markram add 147 for the third wicket. The captain, who has won nine and drawn the other in his first 10 Tests at the helm (no other Test skipper has escaped defeat in his first ten outings), averaged 59.25 in the two-year WTC cycle culminating in the Lord's faceoff. He might be the shortest physically on the park, but stands tallest among his colleagues, his legend having grown manifold following his heroic batting at Lord's. In the 33 years since they first took part in an ICC event – at the 50-over World Cup in Australia and New Zealand – South Africa had lost one final, 12 semifinals and two quarterfinals. Amidst this heap of rubble, their triumph in the inaugural Champions Trophy (then known as the ICC KnockOut Trophy) in Bangladesh in 1998 under Hansie Cronje has almost been forgotten. The roars of this seismic success under Bavuma, however, will reverberate for a long, long time. It's been a difficult time for the country on various counts but this win, fashioned by men from varied and diverse backgrounds, will offer hope. What Bavuma's boys have shown is that unity of purpose, a common goal and a burning fire can make even the most impossible appear fairly commonplace. Cricket in South Africa won't reach the dizzying heights of popularity it enjoys in India, but now more than ever, it looms as a vehicle for change, as a beacon of optimism. That alone makes the end of a long, agonising wait well worth it.

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