Women’s Cricket Rising Stars for 2026: The Players to Watch Closely

Rising Stars in Women’s Cricket: Who to Watch in 2026

Women’s cricket does not need a sales pitch in 2026; the game is already moving fast enough on its own. The more interesting question now is where the next layer of influence is coming from, and the answer sits with players who have already altered matches rather than just decorated age-group lists. Georgia Voll made 101 from 82 balls against India at the Bellerive Oval on 27 February 2026; Pratika Rawal reached 500 ODI runs in only eight innings in April 2025; and South Africa has already seen Kayla Reyneke win two Player of the Match awards in her first three senior T20Is. The names are arriving early.

Voll already bats like a fixture

Georgia Voll.
Georgia Voll.

Australia’s next opening phase is easier to picture when Georgia Voll is in it. On 19 February 2026 at Manuka Oval, she made 88 from 57 balls against India, her best T20I score, and a week later in Hobart, she drove Australia’s chase with 101 from 82 in a five-wicket win that also featured a 119-run stand with Phoebe Litchfield. The details matter more than the headline. Beth Mooney told her early in Canberra to keep looking straight, the field went back after the Powerplay, and Voll’s tempo changed without the innings ever looking frantic. She is ready.

Trisha still looks ahead of her age

Gongadi Trisha’s case is no longer based solely on projection. At the ICC Women’s Under-19 T20 World Cup in Malaysia in January and February 2025, she scored 309 runs in seven innings, finished 133 clear of the next batter, became the first player to make a century in the tournament with 110 not out against Scotland, and then took 3 for 15 and made 44 not out in the final as India beat South Africa by nine wickets. That tournament exposed a serious range: she opened, she cleared the ropes, she bowled leg-spin, and she handled knockout pressure without changing pace. India has produced plenty of gifted batters; Trisha already looks harder to place in one box than most of them.

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South Africa found late-innings muscle

Kayla Reyneke for South Africa U19
Kayla Reyneke for South Africa

Kayla Reyneke has moved faster than many expected once senior cricket arrived. On debut against Pakistan at Potchefstroom on 10 February 2026, she took 2 for 13, made an unbeaten 29 from 16 balls, and hit three sixes in a last-ball chase; on 17 March in Hamilton she repeated the trick in a different shape, finishing 28 not out from nine balls against New Zealand and taking Player of the Match as South Africa levelled the series with an 18-run win. That is why cricket betting online now sits so close to player development conversations in the women’s game: one lower-order hitter with clean range can flip a total, a fantasy slate, and a market in six deliveries. Reyneke does not look rushed at the crease, and that calm is usually the last part to arrive.

England’s next hitter is close

Davina Perrin is not yet a regular in England’s senior side, but the path is shorter than it was a year ago. She hit 74 from 45 balls against the United States at the Under-19 World Cup on 22 January 2025 to send England into the Super Six, then moved into England Women’s Performance Programme for the 2025-26 winter before receiving a call-up to the England Women A four-day squad in Australia. The numbers do not tell the whole story, but they point in the right direction. Perrin tends to score square of the wicket early, then opens the leg side once bowlers miss fuller, and that batting shape usually ages well when the level rises.

Rawal has already changed India’s tempo

Pratika Rawal (India) - 976 Runs
Pratika Rawal (India) – 976 Runs

Pratika Rawal belongs on any 2026 watchlist because her rise has already changed the feel of India’s ODI batting. She became the fastest batter to 500 runs in women’s ODIs on 29 April 2025, getting there in eight innings when she made 78 against South Africa in Sri Lanka, and she had already made 154 against Ireland in Rajkot on 15 January 2025; when India went back to Australia in February 2026, she added another 52 in Hobart against a strong attack. A lot of fans now follow those innings on the same screen as score alerts, wagon wheels, and best sports betting app menus, but Rawal’s appeal is simpler than the device around her. She gives India a top-order batter who can leave well for a spell, absorb seam, and still keep the board moving at better than a run a ball when the field changes.

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The list keeps getting longer

The healthy sign for women’s cricket is that this is not a five-name conversation. Aayushi Shukla took 14 wickets at the 2025 Under-19 World Cup, made the Team of the Tournament, and gave India another left-arm option with control; Reyneke’s rise suggests South Africa’s age-group route is carrying real weight; Voll and Rawal have already crossed into major international responsibility rather than prospect status. The jump is real. By the time the Women’s T20 World Cup reaches England later in 2026, at least one of these players will probably arrive not as a newcomer to note, but as a central name in the tournament.

Yash Tailor

I am Yash Tailor, and I believe work should be driven by passion. Therefore, after completing my Engineering, I chose to work in the Cricket industry, my passion. My goal is to reach a stage where I truly enjoy what I do and give my best to every task with energy and purpose.

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