🏏ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026: Super 8 - M42: England vs Sri Lanka🏏 - Page 2

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Viswasruti thumbnail

India

Posted: 11 hours ago
#11

Sri Lanka vs England: Head-To-Head Record, Recent Performance - Key Stats Ahead Of Super 8 | Cricket News

The ‘Pallekele Dominance’ – England’s Psychological Edge

Despite Sri Lanka’s dark-horse status this tournament, history is heavily weighted in favour of the Three Lions. England holds a dominant 5-1 head-to-head record over Sri Lanka in T20 World Cups. Furthermore, just three weeks ago, Harry Brook’s side completed a 3-0 bilateral sweep on this very ground. For England, Pallekele has been a “home away from home,” with Adil Rashid boasting an incredible average of 14.73 against the Lankans. If the game goes ahead, Sri Lanka will need to overcome a decade-long drought, they haven’t beaten England in a T20 World Cup match since 2012.

Viswasruti thumbnail

India

Posted: 11 hours ago
#12

England T20 World Cup 2026 SWOT Analysis: Can Harry Brook lead the team to a third title?

For the fourth time in three weeks, we will have a England vs Sri Lanka clash as the two teams face off in the T20 World Cup Super 8 stage. But will the game go ahead? That depends on the weather gods as clouds hang over the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium in Kandy.

Viswasruti thumbnail

India

Posted: 11 hours ago
#13

Cricket commentary | England vs Sri Lanka, 42nd Match, Super 8 Group 2 (Y1 v Y4), ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026A mercurial weather forecast will be in play after Group 2 already had an iffy start with the first game between Pakistan and New Zealand washed out on Saturday. The afternoon game will, however, still test the batters, and England will still be wary of the Lankans. Dasun Shanaka’s men may have also suffered a dent in confidence with a defeat to Zimbabwe in their last game. But Sunday is a new day, and an opportunity to break two streaks at once is on the cards.

Viswasruti thumbnail

India

Posted: 11 hours ago
#14

Sri Lanka Vs England Live Streaming, ICC T20 World Cup 2026: When, Where To Watch Super 8 Match | Outlook India

It is Pallekele again and Harry Brook’s men have very formidable recent history to bank on, even if they had a topsy-turvy ride in the group-stages.

When England set out to face hosts Sri Lanka in their Super 8 opener, the teams would have met for the fourth time in T20Is in three weeks, with Pallekele being the host for all of these meetings. In the lead-up to the World Cup, Brook and Co. had a successful outing in these parts, blanking Sri Lanka 0-3 in the series.

Viswasruti thumbnail

India

Posted: 11 hours ago
#15

ENG vs SL Super 8 2nd T20 World Cup 2026 Match | Playing 11 | Pitch Report | Winner | Match Preview - YouTube

All Group 2 matches are being played in Sri Lanka, where rain has affected several games. The first Super 8 match between Pakistan and New Zealand in Colombo was washed out, and both teams shared points. This gives England and Sri Lanka a chance to move ahead with a win.

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 10 hours ago
#16

Stage set for Sri Lanka to turn the tide and pounce on England

England have a well-rounded team and recent success against Sri Lanka but carry blemishes from their group-stage games

Image

Big picture: England, Sri Lanka return to their happy place

It's a measure of England's messed-up psyche right now that the start of the Super Eight might finally be the moment that they can relax into their T20 World Cup campaign. The prologue is done, the terrifying mights of Nepal, Scotland and Italy have been put (just about) in their places. Harry Brook's men can take a deep, cleansing breath, and prepare to face [checks notes] the tournament co-hosts at the scene of one of the most wildly acclaimed victories in their recent history.

Pallekele was the stage, just under a week ago, for Sri Lanka's turbo-charged victory over a shell-shocked (and soon-to-be-eliminated) Australia. One minute the Aussies were 104 for 0 in the ninth over, and the hosts themselves were the ones contemplating an anxious exit from an unexpectedly competitive Group B. The next thing you knew, their spinners had ripped out Australia's soul, and Pathum Nissankahad come howling through the breach with his wonderful 52-ball century.

Pallekele's passionate, opinionated, fanbasemade their presence felt that night, and as the concurrent scenes in Colombo have indicated, Sri Lanka is somewhat gripped by World Cup fever right now - notwithstanding their team's shock loss to a surging Zimbabwe in their final group game.

That six-wicket defeat made no odds to the Super Eight, with the pre-seeded pools now awkwardly featuring all the group winners on one side of the draw and all the runners-up on the other. But it was conceivably an untimely bump back to earth, just in time for Sri Lanka's reunion with a familiar set of foes. England won five matches out of six on their white-ball warm-up tour of the country last month, including three out of three in the T20I leg.

None of these wins were emphatic, but each of them was sealed by subtly different means - Adil Rashid's spin strangle in game 1, Tom Banton's middle-order awakening in game 2, Sam Curran's guts and glory on a tricky turning deck in game 3, in which England's back-up tweakers, Will Jacks and Jacob Bethell applied the coup de grace.

The net effect was to give the impression of a well-rounded England team, one that was ready to march into the main event with form to fall back on and faith in their myriad methods. And while that might still be the case in an eminently surmountable Group 2 which also features the known unknowns of New Zealand and Pakistan, the sheer terror of those near-misses against Nepal and Italy cannot be easily forgotten. Nor the disturbing passivity of their old-school trouncing in Mumbai by West Indies.

The stage is therefore set for Sri Lanka to pounce on the big occasion, as they have often done in the recent past, most notably with their wins at the 2019 and 2023 ODI World Cups, when their brace of victories went against the grain of their one-sided bilateral records.

Sri Lanka's batting has broadly fired across the group stages, with Nissanka leading the line and Kusal Mendis contributing a trio of fifties in four matches, but agonisingly they'll have to take the stage without the raw pace of Matheesha Pathirana, whose slingy action had England's top order in all sorts of bother throughout their bilateral engagements. He lasted just four balls of the Australia game before succumbing to a calf strain, and has been replaced by Dilshan Madushanka.

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 10 hours ago
#17

In the spotlight: Pathum Nissanka and Adil Rashid

Pathum Nissanka joined a curiously niche club when he smoked Australia to the brink of elimination last week. Only Chris Gayle before him had managed a T20 World Cup hundred, in addition to an ODI double-hundred and a century in all three formats - and if he's got some way to go to match Gayle's twin Test 300s, then a career-best 187 in his last series against Bangladesh suggests he's tracking in the right direction. England did not see the best of him in the bilateral series just gone, but they'll remember it alright. At The Oval in 2024, he blazed a superb fourth-innings 127 not out from 124 balls to swipe the third Test from under his opponents' noses. At a time when England's own batting lacks a touch of bravado, Nissanka is perfectly placed to steal a march once again.

Adil Rashid has been an unlikely barometer of England's struggles. On his day, he remains absolutely integral to his team's hopes of adding to the silverware that he has been instrumental in collecting over the course of the past decade. In England's loss to West Indies, he did not concede a single boundary in serving up figures of 2 for 16 in four overs, while a combined haul of 5 for 69 in 12 in Pallekele last month suggests he will be right back on the mark on his return to a happy hunting ground. In between whiles, however, he has been treated with rare disdain by a succession of Associate batters, serving up combined figures of 4 for 121 in 11 overs, including a brutal outing of 3-0-42-0 against Nepal. Part of that might come down to a lack of inhibition from a succession of unfancied opponents who had licence to take him on. But with Brook's tournament strategy leaning so heavily on spin, England cannot afford many more bad days from their veteran. They aren't programmed to cope when he goes missing.

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 10 hours ago
#18

Form guide

Sri Lanka: L W W W L (last five completed T20Is, most recent first)

England: W W L W W

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 10 hours ago
#19

Team news: Wood for Overton on the cards

England's nerves haven't been settled, but their team certainly has. Their depth of batting and bowling options came to the fore on their previous trip to Pallekele, and while there's no expectation of wholesale changes, Brook did hint that some tweaks might be needed to avoid becoming predictable. Whether those are personnel or positional remain to be seen, although Luke Wood's skiddier left-arm seam might be restored in place of Jamie Overton's heavier lengths. The cut to Jacob Bethell's bowling hand (sustained during the match against West Indies), may prevent him from bowling, because those fingers are still strapped. Brook hoped he'd recover in time, however.

Sri Lanka

Pramod Madushan made his first appearance of the campaign in the Zimbabwe defeat, with Dushmantha Chameera taking a break with qualification already assured. That short-term arrangement is likely to be reversed, with Madushanka keeping his spot.

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 10 hours ago
#20

Pitch and conditions: Runs on offer

The pitch will be the same as the one that was distinctly under-used for Australia's one-sided win over Oman on Friday. Just 27 overs were needed on a deck that seemed pretty good for batting, in spite of Adam Zampa finding enough turn to skittle Oman for 104. It has been rolled since, so should play true once more.

Stats and trivia:

  • England have won each of their last 11 T20Is against Sri Lanka, dating back to 2014
  • Adil Rashid has dismissed both Pathum Nissanka and Kusal Perera every time he has bowled to them in T20Is

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