Best is yet to come, says first female Test centurion at Lords Yastika Bhatia
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India's Yastika Bhatia kisses the wicket as she celebrates reaching her hundred during day three of the first Women's Test match at Lord's cricket ground in London, Sunday July 12, 2026. Photo: PTI

Best is yet to come, says first female Test centurion at Lord's Yastika Bhatia

Returning from a knee injury, Bhatia becomes first woman to score a Test hundred, putting India just four wickets away from a historic victory over England


India wicketkeeper-batter Yastika Bhatia, believes her "best is yet to come", after she became the first woman cricketer to hit a Test century at the iconic Lord's stadium, marking an incredible comeback from a career-threatening knee injury last year.

Bhatia struck 113 off 158 before India declared their second innings at the stroke of tea on day three, setting hosts England a massive 457-run target.

Bhatia became the first woman to score a Test century at Lord's before India's bowlers tightened their grip on the historic one-off Women's Test against England here on Sunday (July 12).

'Best is yet to come'

"It's unbelievable (to become first woman cricketer to score a 100 at Lord's) because six months ago I was in a very different place and if you would have told me that I would have my name in the honours board I wouldn't have believed it," Bhatia said after the third day's play.

"The best is yet come, I have always believed that. But so far it's really good and I enjoyed my time in the middle. It's just the beginning, a lot more to come and I am looking forward to that," he added.

She credited her family, teammates and support staff for helping her recover from the career-threatening torn ACL in her left knee that she sustained in October last year. The injury, which needed a surgery, prevented her from competing in India's ODI World Cup-winning campaign at home.

Also read: Why England-India women's Test at Lord's is a huge landmark

"A lot of people have been working behind the scenes, my family, my father, mother, my sister they have been the biggest backbone, support. My coaches, trainers back home, the support staff and teammates here, they have backed me.

"Also COE (BCCI's Centre of Excellence) where I underwent rehab. All of them played a crucial role, it wouldn't have been possible without them," she said.

Love for the game

Recollecting the tough phase during her recovery period, Bhatia said her love for the game kept her in a positive frame of mind.

"I started from scratch after the surgery. For two months I was in total rest, all muscles of my left leg were lost in that two months, so after that I had to start from scratch.

"Rehab process began after that and slowly, progress happened. So it was frustrating also, missing out on big tournaments and just doing rehab...but at the same time I had belief in myself that I can comeback from this injury," the 25-year-old left-handed batter said. "People around me also helped me in keeping a positive frame of mind. Whatever setbacks you have but the love for the game and belief in yourself that's very crucial to make a comeback from rock bottom," she added.

She said she never though about a century and her only focus was on helping the team win the match.

Also read: Women's T20 World Cup: India thrash Pakistan

"I didn't think of my 100 or anything but on posting a big score at a good rate, so that we have good time to take their 10 wickets, that was in my mind. I always play best when I play for the team. Playing for the country is a matter of big pride for me," she said.

"I was given a clear message play according to the ball, there was no rush from the dressing room, no extra pressure, they were like 'play whatever you feel best'. The ball was coming better on the bat so I was trying little more and also with wickets in hand, we were in good position," Bhatia added.

India-England match

Resuming the penultimate day with an overall lead of 269, India declared their second innings at 341/7 at the stroke of tea, setting England an improbable target of 457 in four sessions.

In reply, England slumped to 130/6 at stumps with Amy Jones unbeaten on 52, leaving India just four wickets away from a memorable victory in the first-ever women's Test at Lord's.
Sayali Satghare and Kranti Gaud claimed two wickets apiece to put the visitors in complete control.
Brief Scores: India 285 and 341/7 declared; 86.3 overs (Yastika Bhatia 113, Smriti Mandhana 70, Richa Ghosh 50 not out; Sophie Ecclestone 5/118, Lauren Bell 2/27). England 170 and 130/6 in 40 overs (Amy Jones 52 batting; Sayali Satghare 2/19, Kranti Gaud 2/40).
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