Which Indian women player is the leading wicket-taker in Women's One-Day International (ODI) cricket?

Which Indian women player is the leading wicket-taker in Women's One-Day International (ODI) cricket? Correct Answer Jhulan Goswami

The Correct Answer is Jhulan Goswami.

  • Jhulan Goswami is an Indian women player is the leading wicket-taker in Women's One-Day International (ODI) cricket.
  • She is the former captain of the women's national cricket team in India.
  • She has considered one of the greatest women fast bowlers of all time and one of the fastest bowlers in the history of women's cricket, and the fastest contemporary bowler since Cathryn Fitzpatrick's retirement as an all-rounder who bats right-handed and bowls right-arm medium-fast.
  • Goswami declared her retirement from the WT20Is in August 2018.
  • In 2007, she received the ICC Women's Player of the Year award and the M.A. Chidambaram trophy in 2011 for Best Women's Cricketer.
  • In January 2016, Goswami was ranked first in the ICC Women's ODI bowling rankings. In Women's One Day International cricket, Goswami is the top wicket-taker.
  • She became the first bowler to take 200 wickets in WODIs in February 2018, against South Africa.
  • During the second one-day game of the three-match series at Kimberley, she accomplished this by taking the wicket of South African opener Laura Wolvaardt.

Related Questions

Principle: If an injury is the result of a reasonably foreseeable cause, the person/authority responsible is liable for damages because he has a duty to take reasonable measures to prevent it.
Facts: Janet, a housewife standing at her balcony, was struck on the head by a ball that flew out of a cricket field across her home. Janet sues the District Cricket Association (DCA), the owner of the cricket field for public nuisance and negligence on the ground that the field did not have a fence high enough to prevent such occurrence. District Cricket Association (DCA) claims that only about 10 balls had escaped the field in the previous 10 years and it was therefore an unforeseeable risk. Is there a duty on the part of the District Cricket Association (DCA) to prevent the risk? Is the District Cricket Association (DCA) liable to compensate Janet?