Did Pratika Rawal Just Become the Joint-Fastest Batter to Score 1000 Runs in WODIs?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Pratika Rawal equaled the world record for the fastest 1000 runs in Women's ODIs.
- She achieved this milestone in just 23 innings.
- Pratika surpassed other renowned players like Mithali Raj and Meg Lanning.
- She is the fastest Indian woman to reach 1000 runs in ODIs.
- Pratika is on track to score 1000 runs in a calendar year.
Navi Mumbai, Oct 23 (NationPress) Pratika Rawal, the promising young Indian opener, etched her name in history on Thursday by matching the World Record for the fastest player to amass 1000 runs in Women's ODI cricket. She achieved this remarkable feat during Match 24 of the Women's World Cup against New Zealand at the DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai.
Pratika reached the four-figure milestone with a stunning boundary off New Zealand's medium pacer Lea Tahuhu in the 11th over, executing a brilliant shot over mid-wicket.
This achievement brought her total to 1004 runs, reaching the 1000-run mark in just 23 innings, making her the joint-fastest player to accomplish this in ODIs, equaling the 37-year-old record set by Australia’s Lindsay Reeler, who also reached this milestone in 23 innings.
Previously, Pratika had the chance to break the record in India's last Women's World Cup match against England but narrowly missed by 12 runs. On Thursday, she not only matched the record but also surpassed renowned players such as Meg Lanning, Laura Wolvaardt, and Mithali Raj.
This milestone makes her the fastest Indian woman batter to reach 1000 runs in ODIs, surpassing Deepti Sharma, who achieved this in 29 innings.
She is now the 13th Indian batter to score over 1000 runs in Women's ODIs, joining the ranks of players like Richa Ghosh, Smriti Mandhana, Harmanpreet Kaur, and Mithali Raj.
Richa Ghosh holds the title of the fastest Indian and the third fastest globally to reach the 1000-run mark in the 50-over format in terms of balls faced, achieving this in 1010 balls, trailing behind Australia’s Ashleigh Gardner (917 balls) and England’s Nat Sciver-Brunt (943 balls).
Pratika is also on track to become the second batter worldwide to accumulate 1000 runs in a calendar year. So far, she has scored 890 runs in 20 innings in 2025. If she achieves this, she will join her opening partner, Smriti Mandhana, who set the record as the first batter to hit 1000 runs in a calendar year earlier in the World Cup, having scored 1188 runs in 2025.