India's all-rounder Sneh Rana created a personal milestone while playing the 3rd ODI between India Women and Australia Women at the Arun Jaitley Stadium in Delhi, as she reached her 50th WODI wicket. The milestone came at a crucial juncture when Australia were dominating, courtesy of a massive partnership between Georgia Voll and Ellyse Perry. Rana's record wicket came in the 21.1 over, ending a threatening 107-run partnership. Bowling a half-tracker drifting down leg, Rana pushed Voll batting smoothly on 81 from 68 balls into a poorly timed pull. Voll lost her shape attempting to play across the line, and the ball ballooned off a top edge. Substitute Uma Chetry, at short fine leg, held her nerve to take a clean catch under pressure. The development touched off an emotional outburst from Rana, who threw her arms up and gazed in the direction of the Indian dugout, clearly shaken by the moment. Watch here: Sneh Rana breaks the partnership! 🙌Georgia Voll departsUpdates ▶️ https://t.co/Z0OmZGUI6m#TeamIndia | #INDvAUS | @IDFCFIRSTBank | @SnehRana15 pic.twitter.com/2V4UK9vAGa — BCCI Women (@BCCIWomen) September 20, 2025 Also Read: WATCH: Jason Sangha’s stunning direct hit catches Matthew Gilkes short This wicket not only raised her fifty in WODIs but also provided India with a much-needed start in an otherwise one-sided Australian inning. Before this, Australia had opted to bat and were well in control, scoring 269/3 at the 35-over mark. Though they lost captain Alyssa Healy for 30 and then Voll, their run didn't get stalled. Ellyse Perry, as dependable as ever, made a solid 68 off 72, while Beth Mooney continued to pound the ball, unbeaten on 80 off 49 balls. With a run rate close to 7.7, Australia seemed to be racing towards a total well in excess of 300. For India, bowlers such as Kranti Goud and Renuka Singh had their share of moments but couldn't suppress the flow of runs consistently. Rana's emergence was a ray of hope, but with Australia's strong batting line-up still remaining intact, India now has a huge task to turn the game around in the death overs.