T20 World Cup 2025/26, SL vs PAK 50th Match, Super Eights, Group 2 Match Preview

Big picture: Will Pakistan abandon its conservative approach?

Pakistan’s habitual desperate net performance calculation towards the end of the group stage produced another struggle. With hosts Sri Lanka already eliminated, Pakistan’s chances of surviving the T20 World Cup were slim thanks to England’s surprise comeback win over New Zealand. New Zealand boast a much better net run rate (1.390) than Pakistan (-0.461), so Salman Agha’s men will need to win by around 64 runs on Saturday or chase down the Sri Lankan target in around 13.1 overs to make it to the semi-finals. For Pakistan, this is the only number that matters in Pallekele.

This should, in theory, change the somewhat conservative approach they have taken through the middle overs. To be honest, Babar Azam’s position in this T20I setup has become hardened enough to be debatable in a normal T20I situation, but borderline unjustifiable within these constraints. But he is not the only player with a limited strike rate ceiling, captain Salman Agha has similarly struggled in this tournament and indeed over the wider span of his T20I career.

However, Pakistan is yet to show its ability to achieve a victory of this magnitude in this tournament. In fact, Pakistan have never won by such a margin when batting first against a regular member in a T20 World Cup, and only once in 2009 when chasing. Sri Lanka’s slow surface compared to India’s flat pitch further complicates the path to such a victory, as does the Pakistani middle-order, which does not boast elite power batting, and Saim Ayub’s shaky form. But nonetheless, it is an opportunity and at ICC events, sometimes that is all Pakistan asks for.

Pride was at stake for Sri Lanka, who started the tournament with such promise, but then peaked and then declined after a glorious win over Australia. They have lost their last three games and were the first team to be eliminated from the Super Eight. Pakistan’s qualifying scenario means little to them and they will want to show that they are more than a foil for Pakistan’s glory or an obstacle to their progress.

But the question is what Pakistan can achieve and whether they can prevent New Zealand from reaching the semi-finals of another ICC tournament.

Form Instructions

sri lanka LLLWW (last 5 completed matches, most recent first)
Pakistan LWLWW

People of note: Dunith Wellalage and Salman Agha

Many Sri Lankan players will invariably move on after this T20 World Cup. But the player who will form the core of the team for the next generation is Dunith Wellalage. The 23-year-old left-arm spinner’s competitive attitude has put him among a small list of Sri Lankan players who have achieved more established reputations in this tournament, and his ever-improving skillset to go along with it. He is yet to play a T20I against Pakistan, missed the Asia Cup match and returned home after losing his family. However, with so many right-handed batsmen in Pakistan’s top order, he could have been deployed early against New Zealand, perhaps initially to nip Sahibzada Farhan in the bud.

Salman Agha probably deserves more scrutiny than that, having endured an indifferent tournament with the bat and an uninspiring tournament as captain. Questions swirling around his suitability for form will only intensify after he allowed the game to drift with the ball against India and England, and his attacking attempts with the bat at No. 3 will continue to feel fake rather than organic. He scored 60 runs in 5 innings in this tournament and 38 runs in 1 innings against Namibia. If Pakistan go away, it will be difficult to imagine him retaining the captain’s armband, let alone his role in the side. But Saturday may be his last chance to take control of his own destiny.

team news

Sri Lanka have been widely criticized for their meek surrender to New Zealand, but any major changes are unlikely to occur as the tournament draws to a close. Kusal Mendis suffered hamstring stiffness against New Zealand and is unlikely to feature with Camille Mishara returning as wicketkeeper-batsman.

sri lanka (Ama): 1 Pathum Nissanka, 2 Kamil Mishara (main), 3 Charith Asalanka, 4 Pavan Rathnayake, 5 Kamindu Mendis, 6 Dasun Shanaka (captain), 7 Dushan Hemantha, 8 Dunith Wellalage, 9 Dushmantha Chameera, 10 Maheesh Theekshana, 11 Dilshan Madushanka.

Shaheen Afridi is likely to retain his place after performing well against England. If Pakistan stick to their two specialist seamers on this surface, it will be a back-to-back shootout between Naseem Shah and Salman Mirza. What is less certain is how the equation changes Pakistan’s batting line-up. So far, they have been reluctant to drop Babar Azam or play Khawaja Nafay. Any caution should go out the window as they fight to survive.

Pakistan (Amaz): 1 Sahibzada Farhan, 2 Saim Ayub, 3 Salman Agha (captain), 4 Babar Azam/Khawaja Nafay, 5 Fakhar Zaman, 6 Shadab Khan, 7 Usman Khan (wk), 8 Mohammad Nawaz/Faheem Ashraf, 9 Shaheen Afridi, 10 Salman Mirza/Naseem Shah, 11 Usman. Tariq

pitch and conditions

The match, held at Palekele, will use the same stadium where England played against Pakistan. The surface showed increased support for pace bowling with hints of early movement. It’s been a dry week for Kandy that will continue into the weekend.

Statistics and Trivia

  • This match will be Salman Agha’s 50th match in charge of Pakistan. He is the second Pakistan captain to reach this mark after Babar Azam, who led his country 85 times in this format.

  • In eight innings against Pakistan, Pathum Nissanka scored 119 runs off 117 balls, his lowest strikeout rate (101.70) and average (17) against a regular team.
  • quotes

    “For the most part, the spinners performed well and we were happy with certain parts of our game. So if you project to the last game, you see that they performed very well. It was the last part of their bowling that was the problem.”
    Sri Lanka spin bowling coach Rene Ferdinand Satisfied with his team’s slow bowling.

    Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo’s Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000

    Source Link : https://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/story/1526250.html?ex_cid=OTC-RSS

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