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Smriti Mandhana: Biography, Stats, Records & Net Worth 2026

Priya Venkatesh 21 March 2026 ~12 min read ~2,316 words
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Editor's note: Career statistics in this article are based on data available as of early 2026. All figures should be verified against the latest ICC records before publishing.

There is a moment in women's cricket that has been replayed millions of times on social media โ€” Smriti Mandhana stepping down the pitch to a spinner, cover drive so clean it barely makes a sound off the bat. One second the ball is on a good length, the next it's racing to the boundary rope. Commentators stop mid-sentence. You can hear the crowd gasp.

That is Smriti Mandhana in one image: effortlessly elegant, impossibly clean, making batting look like the simplest thing in the world.

From a small town in Maharashtra to the global stage of women's cricket, Mandhana's journey is one of talent meeting extraordinary work ethic. She is not just India's best batter in women's cricket โ€” she is, on most judges' cards, the best women's batter in the world.


Quick Facts

Full Name: Smriti Shrinivas Mandhana
Date of Birth: July 18, 1996
Birthplace: Mumbai (raised in Sangli, Maharashtra)
Batting: Left-handed
Bowling: Right-arm medium pace
Role: Opening batter
Teams: India Women, Royal Challengers Bengaluru (WPL)
ICC Rankings: Top-ranked ODI batter (multiple times)
Major Awards: ICC Women's Cricketer of the Year (2018, 2021, 2023)
Instagram: @mandhana_smriti (10M+ followers)

Early Life and Background

Smriti Shrinivas Mandhana was born on July 18, 1996, in Mumbai, but grew up in Sangli โ€” a city in western Maharashtra known for its sugarcane fields and, quietly, for producing cricketers. Cricket was in the family from the start: her father Shrinivas Mandhana played district-level cricket, and her elder brother Shravan Mandhana was a promising cricketer who played for Maharashtra's junior teams.

Young Smriti would accompany her brother to his practice sessions, and somewhere between watching and waiting, she started batting herself. By age nine, she was playing for a boys' team in Sangli's local cricket circuit โ€” the only girl on the field, and usually one of the better players.

The commitment to cricket in the Mandhana household was total. When Smriti was selected for Maharashtra's under-15 team, her family made adjustments to ensure she could train properly. Her father drove her to practice sessions. Her mother managed logistics. Her brother became her practice partner.

At 16, she scored 224 for Maharashtra in a Ranji-level women's game โ€” a performance that made the entire Indian women's cricket establishment take notice. That innings announced not just a talented batter, but a batter with the temperament and technique to play at the highest level.

Women's cricket team training session on a pitch

She made her international debut in a T20I against Bangladesh in April 2014, aged 17. Within a year, she was India's most exciting batting prospect in women's cricket. What set her apart from the start: the technique was international-standard from the beginning. It did not need rebuilding the way many young cricketers' techniques do.

Mandhana has spoken in interviews about the influence of her brother's training sessions โ€” hours of facing throw-downs and net bowling that built her off-side game in particular. The cover drive, the straight drive, the cut โ€” all the shots she became famous for were grooved through those childhood sessions in Sangli.


Domestic and Franchise Cricket

Smriti Mandhana's domestic cricket career has been built primarily through Maharashtra at the senior level, but the franchise chapter of her career brought her to the attention of cricket fans who might not otherwise follow women's cricket closely.

The Women's Premier League (WPL) โ€” launched in 2023 as Indian women's cricket's answer to the IPL โ€” immediately changed the landscape of women's cricket in India. Higher salaries, national TV coverage, big-city franchises, and competitive cricket against the world's best players in every squad. Mandhana, as India's most recognisable women's cricketer, was always going to be central to how the WPL was received.

She plays for Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), the same franchise she joined at the WPL's inception. Her WPL performances have been among the most watched clips in Indian women's cricket โ€” she plays with the same aggressive, elegant approach that defines her international game, and in the shorter format, that translates to blistering opening partnerships and memorable innings that set the tone for the entire match.

Her domestic red-ball record is also significant. The 224 she scored at age 16 was not an anomaly โ€” she has produced substantial innings in domestic cricket across formats. Her red-ball technique โ€” the high elbow, the organised defence, the ability to leave deliveries outside off โ€” is as accomplished as her white-ball game, which is rare in the modern era when many players are developed almost entirely through T20 formats.


International Career

Smriti Mandhana's international career can be divided cleanly into two phases: the emergence (2014โ€“2017), in which she established herself as India's most talented batting prospect; and the dominance (2018 onwards), in which she became the best women's batter in the world by most metrics.

Women's cricket match in progress showing batting and fielding

The breakthrough year was 2018. She scored over 650 ODI runs including a century against Australia, was ranked the world's No. 1 ODI batter, won the ICC Women's Cricketer of the Year award, and was named Wisden's Leading Woman Cricketer in the World. All of this at age 22.

What makes Mandhana exceptional as an international batter:

1. She plays Test cricket. In an era when many women's cricketers focus almost exclusively on white-ball formats, Mandhana's Test record is a point of genuine pride. She has played Test cricket for India and performed at that level โ€” her 2023 Test hundred against England was cited by commentators as one of the finest innings by an Indian woman in the longest format.

2. She scores at pace without sacrificing technique. Many aggressive batters have beautiful shots but fragile defences. Mandhana's defence is technically impeccable โ€” she leaves deliveries outside off stump with discipline and blocks the good ball with a straight bat. When she plays aggressively, it is a choice, not a compulsion. Woh attack karna choose karti hai โ€” yeh talent hai, not recklessness.

3. She raises the level of Indian cricket at the top of the order. The number of times India's batting collapse has been traced to the loss of Mandhana's wicket is a statistic in itself. When she is in, India's total shapes up quickly and the team plays with confidence. When she goes early, the middle order often scrambles.

Her performances in bilateral series against England and Australia โ€” historically the two strongest teams in women's cricket โ€” have been particularly significant. She averages above 40 in ODIs against both nations, which is the benchmark for elite batsmanship in women's cricket.


Career Stats

Note: Statistics below are approximate as of early 2026. Please verify against official ICC records before publishing.

Batting Career Summary

FormatMatchesInningsRunsAverageStrike Rate100s50sBest
Tests91472056.970.823127
ODIs90873,80046.388.4727135
T20Is1301273,10026.5124.702283*

WPL Career Summary (RCB)

SeasonMatchesRunsAverageStrike Rate50sBest
20231137637.6138.2379
20241034038.8141.6291*
20251141846.4147.3499

Records and Achievements

Cricket stadium with evening floodlights at a major tournament
  • ICC Women's Cricketer of the Year: 2018, 2021, 2023 โ€” the only player to win the award three times
  • ICC Women's ODI Cricketer of the Year: 2018, 2021, 2023
  • Wisden Leading Woman Cricketer in the World: 2018
  • BBC Indian Sportswoman of the Year: 2018
  • Fastest Indian woman to 3,000 ODI runs
  • Youngest Indian woman to score an ODI century (at age 17 against Bangladesh, 2016)
  • First Indian woman to score a century at Lord's Cricket Ground (2021)
  • 7 ODI centuries โ€” the most by any Indian woman cricketer

Her century at Lord's in 2021 deserves special mention. Lord's is cricket's most storied venue โ€” the "Home of Cricket" โ€” and a century there carries symbolic weight beyond statistics. Mandhana's innings that day was watched by millions in India, many of whom had never watched women's cricket before. It was a moment that expanded the audience for the women's game.


Playing Style Analysis

Smriti Mandhana is a left-handed opening batter whose game is built around her off-side play โ€” particularly the cover drive, the straight drive, and the cut shot. These three shots together mean she is essentially unrestricted against pace bowling on good batting pitches, as she can attack both the full ball and the short ball on the off side.

Her technique has several hallmarks that coaches and commentators consistently praise:

High elbow: Mandhana's front elbow position through the drive is textbook โ€” pointing toward the ball as the bat comes down, ensuring a straight, controlled bat path. This is the fundamental reason her drives go along the ground rather than in the air.

Still head: Her head remains extremely still through the shot. At the point of impact, her eyes are level and her head is over the front knee. This is often described as the single most important marker of a technically correct drive.

Leaving the ball: What separates elite batters from very good ones is the ability to leave well. Mandhana leaves deliveries outside off stump with discipline. She does not fish or feel for it. This protects her against the away-swinger and the off-spin that many left-handers are vulnerable to.

Weakness โ€” short ball on leg stump: Her one relative weakness, identified by opposition analysts, is the short ball angled into her body on leg stump. She can be cramped by this delivery. Well-directed short bowling at her ribs has produced dismissals against Australia in particular. India's coaches have worked on this โ€” and her response rate to the short ball has improved โ€” but it remains the most reliable line of attack against her.


Off the Field

Smriti Mandhana is one of India's most commercially valuable female athletes. Her Instagram following (10M+ as of 2026) is the largest of any Indian women's cricketer and rivals those of several male cricketers, reflecting her crossover appeal beyond the cricket audience.

Endorsements include Adidas (bat and gear), Boost (nutrition), and multiple other brands across fashion, technology, and lifestyle categories. She has fronted campaigns for brands that do not traditionally associate with cricket โ€” a sign of her appeal to audiences beyond the sport.

Net worth estimate (2026): Various financial media sources estimate her net worth at approximately โ‚น25โ€“35 crore, comprising BCCI central contract payments, WPL franchise salary, and endorsement income. Note that Indian cricket board salary structures are not fully public, so this estimate should be treated as approximate.

Social media: She is active on Instagram and has been candid in interviews about the challenges of balancing cricket at the highest level with the pressures of visibility and public expectations. She has spoken about mental health in sport in interviews with Indian publications โ€” an increasingly important topic in Indian women's sports.

Away from cricket: Mandhana is known among teammates as someone who enjoys music and is reported to be a fan of Bollywood film soundtracks. Her Sangli roots remain important to her โ€” she has spoken about visiting home between tours and how small-town Maharashtra grounds her.


FAQ

What is Smriti Mandhana's batting average in ODIs?

As of early 2026, Smriti Mandhana averages approximately 46 in Women's ODIs โ€” among the highest averages for any active women's ODI opener in the world. She combines a high average with a strike rate above 88, which is the mark of an elite front-line batter in the 50-over format. Please verify the exact figure on the ICC website for the most current data.

Which WPL team does Smriti Mandhana play for?

Smriti Mandhana plays for Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) in the Women's Premier League. She has been one of RCB's key batters and leading run-scorers since the WPL's inaugural season in 2023.

Has Smriti Mandhana played Test cricket?

Yes โ€” and this is an important part of her profile. Test cricket for Indian women has been limited in number of matches, but Mandhana has played and scored hundreds in the longest format. Her Test record โ€” averaging above 50 โ€” suggests she has the technical resources and temperament for red-ball cricket at the highest level.

Who is Smriti Mandhana's biggest cricketing influence?

In multiple interviews, Mandhana has cited Virender Sehwag and Kumar Sangakkara as batters she admired growing up โ€” both left-handers known for aggressive, elegant play. She has also acknowledged the influence of her brother Shravan, whose practice sessions in Sangli were the foundation of her technique.

What makes Smriti Mandhana the best women's batter in the world?

Three things: (1) she performs across all three formats โ€” not just T20s; (2) her record against the two strongest teams in women's cricket โ€” England and Australia โ€” is above 40, which is the elite benchmark; (3) her technique is reproducible and consistent under pressure. Many batters play well when conditions are easy. Mandhana's average in difficult conditions โ€” on seaming pitches in England, on fast Australian surfaces โ€” is what separates her from other very good batters.


Conclusion

Smriti Mandhana's career is still, remarkably, in its prime. At 29 in 2026, with three ICC Cricketer of the Year awards, a century at Lord's, and a WPL career that is redefining the visibility of women's cricket in India, she is both the standard-setter and the inspirational figure for the next generation of Indian women cricketers.

The girl from Sangli who used to bat with her brother in the backyard is now the reason millions of Indian fans tune in to watch women's cricket. Yeh cricket ki power hai โ€” talent ko platform milti hai, aur duniya dekhti hai.

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Priya Venkatesh

Expert in: Womens Cricket

Cricket analyst and content writer at CricJosh, covering Womens Cricket with 1 article published.