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India's long and often painful wait for an ICC title culminated in a moment of sheer glory on Sunday night. Harmanpreet Kaur's determined brigade decisively defeated a resilient South African side by 52 runs at the packed Dr. DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai. This victory finally shattered the two-decade-long jinx of heartbreak in World Cup finals, elevating India to the elite list of ODI world champions alongside nations like Australia and England. The field erupted in raw emotion as the final wicket fell, with Harmanpreet's roar echoing the dreams of a billion fans.
Asked to bat first, India posted a formidable total of 298 for seven on what was a tricky pitch. The innings was anchored by a solid 104-run opening stand between Smriti Mandhana (45) and Shafali Verma (87). Shafali, bouncing back from earlier failures, became the youngest batter (male or female) to score a fifty in an ODI World Cup final, setting the aggressive tone. Though key middle-order players like Harmanpreet (20) and Jemimah Rodrigues (24) couldn't convert starts, a patient half-century from Deepti Sharma (58) and a rapid 34 from Richa Ghosh pushed India close to the 300-mark.

South Africa’s chase was set up by their captain, Laura Wolvaardt, but the effort ultimately fell short. While Wolvaardt fought a brave battle, making a superb 101 off 98 balls—becoming only the second player ever to score centuries in both a World Cup semi-final and final—she lacked substantial support. India chipped away at the wickets: Amanjot Kaur broke the opening stand with a brilliant direct hit, and the "woman with the golden arm," Shafali Verma, took two crucial wickets, including that of the dangerous Sune Luus, tilting the momentum firmly in India's favor.

The historic victory was cemented by Deepti Sharma's masterful performance with the ball. After contributing with the bat, Deepti dominated the Proteas' middle and lower order, taking her fifth and final wicket to finish with incredible figures of 5/36. She became the first spinner ever to take a five-wicket haul in a Women’s World Cup final. Her clinical bowling spell dismantled the final resistance, confirming India’s 52-run win and igniting the jubilant celebrations of a nation that had waited patiently for this defining moment.