Harmanpreet, Smriti, Divya Deshmukh among nominees for 2025 BBC sports awards

NEW DELHI, Feb 2: Skipper Harmanpreet Kaur and her deputy Smriti Mandhana, who were central to India’s historic 2025 Women’s World Cup triumph, and chess prodigy Divya Deshmukh are among the nominees for the 2025 BBC Indian Sportswoman of the Year Awards.
Pistol shooting sensation Suruchi Singh and track and field athlete Jyothi Yarraji are the other two nominations for the prestigious annual award for the year 2025.
“Indian Sportswoman of the Year marks a year of sporting brilliance for women across India, and the BBC World Service plays an essential role in showcasing and celebrating those endeavours like no other media provider.
“We’re thrilled to give these women a platform to amplify their hard-earned achievements to audiences in India and around the world,” Fiona Crack, Interim Global Director, BBC News, said in a release.
Kaur, the captain of the Indian women’s cricket team, led the country to its maiden ICC Women’s World Cup title in November 2025.
Playing on home soil, she led from the front with an 88-ball 89, chasing a tall target of 339 runs in the semi-finals against Australia.
In another World Cup semi-final against the same opponent back in 2017, her innings of 171 not out is still widely regarded as one of the greatest innings in women’s cricket.
She has featured in Time magazine’s 2023 list of Top 100 Emerging Leaders and BBC’s 100 Most Inspiring Women.
Mandhana, the vice-captain of the same team, is already making a claim for a place among the all-time greats of the sport.
The 29-year-old left-hander has the second-highest number of centuries in one-day internationals and the third-highest runs among current players.
Hailing from Sangli city in Maharashtra, Mandhana was inspired by her father and brother, both of whom played cricket at the district level.
In September last year, she made a 50-ball hundred against Australia — the fastest ton by an Indian in the format, breaking Virat Kohli’s record.
She has been named the ICC Women’s Cricketer of the Year twice, in 2018 and 2021. (PTI)