Pakistan National Cricket Team vs Sri Lanka National Cricket Team – T20I World Cup 2026 Match Time, Venue
Pakistan National Cricket Team vs Sri Lanka National Cricket Team – T20I World Cup 2026 Match Time, Venue, Playing XI & Preview
February 28, Pallekele — Pakistan’s entire T20 World Cup 2026 campaign comes down to 40 overs. Beat Sri Lanka by 64 runs or chase down the target in 13 overs, or go home. Everything you need to know before the most important match of Pakistan’s tournament is right here.
Match 50 — Official Time & Venue Details
The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 Super 8 Group 2 stage concludes on Saturday, February 28 with the most consequential match of Pakistan’s entire tournament campaign. Pakistan face co-hosts Sri Lanka at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium in Kandy — and the stakes could not be higher. Pakistan need not just a win, but a big, dominant victory to have any chance of displacing New Zealand from the second semi-final spot.
Pakistan arrive at Pallekele in a desperate position: one point from two matches, a negative net run rate of -0.461, after their Super 8 opener against New Zealand was abandoned due to rain at the R. Premadasa Stadium and a heartbreaking two-wicket loss to England in their second match. Sri Lanka, on the other hand, have been completely eliminated — losing all three Super 8 games against England, New Zealand, and playing purely for pride and home crowd honour. England have already secured their semi-final berth from Group 2, while New Zealand sit second with 3 points and NRR of +1.390. Pakistan must overturn that gap with a single result.
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Pakistan’s Semi-Final Qualification Scenario — Exact Numbers
Pakistan’s Exact Qualification Requirements
Pakistan currently sit third in Super 8 Group 2 with 1 point and NRR of -0.461. New Zealand are second with 3 points and NRR of +1.390. England have already qualified as group toppers with 6 points from 3 wins.
For Pakistan to reach the T20 World Cup 2026 semi-final, they must match New Zealand on points (4) AND beat their NRR of +1.390. The exact qualification requirements are:
If Pakistan bat first: Win by 64 runs or more to reach the required NRR.
If Pakistan bat second: Chase the target in 13.1 overs or fewer to reach the required NRR.
Even if Pakistan qualify, their semi-final venue will be determined by results. If Pakistan progress, the semi-final will be held at Colombo’s R. Premadasa Stadium. For every possible scenario explained in detail, read our complete Pakistan qualification scenario article.
PAK Must WIN by 64+ Runs OR Chase in 13.1 Overs| Super 8 Group 2 Standings | Played | Won | Points | NRR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🏴 England | 3 | 3 | 6 | +2.150 — QUALIFIED |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | 3 | 1 | 3 | +1.390 |
| 🇵🇰 Pakistan | 2 | 0 | 1 | -0.461 |
| 🇱🇰 Sri Lanka | 3 | 0 | 0 | -2.800 — ELIMINATED |
Match Time & Venue — Pallekele International Cricket Stadium
The Pakistan vs Sri Lanka T20 World Cup 2026 Super 8 match (Match No. 50) is officially confirmed for Saturday, February 28, 2026 at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium in Pallekele, Kandy, Sri Lanka. The toss takes place at 6:30 PM IST (6:30 PM PKT / 1:00 PM GMT), with the first ball bowled at 7:00 PM IST (6:30 PM PKT / 1:30 PM GMT). This is the final Super 8 Group 2 fixture of the entire ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026.
| Time Zone | Toss | First Ball |
|---|---|---|
| 🇵🇰 Pakistan Standard Time (PKT) | 6:30 PM | 7:00 PM |
| 🇮🇳 India / 🇱🇰 Sri Lanka (IST/SLST) | 6:30 PM | 7:00 PM |
| 🌍 GMT / UTC | 1:00 PM | 1:30 PM |
| 🇦🇪 UAE / Gulf (GST) | 5:00 PM | 5:30 PM |
| 🇬🇧 UK (GMT) | 1:00 PM | 1:30 PM |
| 🇺🇸 US Eastern (ET) | 8:00 AM | 8:30 AM |
| 🇦🇺 Australia (AEST) | 12:00 AM (Mar 1) | 12:30 AM (Mar 1) |
Where to Watch PAK vs SL Live — Broadcast & Streaming
Live TV & Streaming Channels – PAK vs SL T20 World Cup 2026
Weather Forecast — Pallekele, February 28, 2026
Clear Skies — Full Match Virtually Certain, But Dew Will Be Decisive
After a tournament disrupted repeatedly by rain — including Pakistan’s washout against New Zealand — the weather forecast for Pallekele on February 28 brings good news: AccuWeather reports a 0% chance of rain at match time (7:00 PM IST). Daytime temperatures will peak at around 27°C before dropping to a cooler 17–18°C during the evening session. Cloud cover may increase slightly at night but no precipitation is expected.
The critical factor, however, is DEW. Pallekele sits in Sri Lanka’s hill country, and evening humidity of around 74% creates heavy moisture in the air that settles on the pitch surface as the second innings progresses. This makes the ball greasy and extremely difficult for bowlers to grip — spinners especially struggle to get purchase and turn, while seamers lose control of death-over yorkers. The team batting second will have a significant advantage in the final 6–8 overs due to dew. The toss winner is expected to choose to chase.
No Rain Expected — Full 40-Over Match Heavy Dew Alert — Chasing Team FavouredPitch Report — Pallekele International Cricket Stadium, Kandy
Batter-Friendly With Long Boundaries — Dew Flips Second-Innings Advantage
The Pallekele International Cricket Stadium is a high-scoring ground. The average first-innings T20I score here is 171–175, and batters who start well tend to go on to big scores because the pitch stays true throughout the first innings. The long boundaries — 75 metres square and 80 metres straight — mean mistimed slog shots are caught rather than clearing the rope, so smart batting is rewarded over brute hitting.
In the early overs, seamers get some movement with the new ball — there is pace and carry available, which means Shaheen Shah Afridi’s inclusion becomes more attractive here than on Colombo’s slower R. Premadasa pitch. By the middle overs, the surface slows and spinners come into their own. Then comes the dew — by the 15th–16th over of the second innings, the ball becomes slippery and scoring accelerates significantly for the batting side. Chasing teams have won 6 of the last 10 T20Is at this venue, and that trend is only reinforced when dew is a factor.
For Pakistan, the strategy implications are major: if they win the toss, they should consider batting first and posting a massive total that even a dew-affected bowling attack can defend — given they need to win by 64+ runs to qualify.
Team Form & Super 8 Campaign Review
🇵🇰 Pakistan — Farhan Exceptional, Rest Inconsistent, Usman Tariq Their X-Factor
Pakistan’s Super 8 campaign has been a story of individual brilliance surrounded by collective underperformance. Sahibzada Farhan is the tournament’s leading run-scorer with 283 runs including a century and two half-centuries — one of the great individual T20 World Cup performances in Pakistan’s history. But every other specialist batter has been a disappointment. Captain Salman Agha has managed just 44 runs, Saim Ayub 70, and Babar Azam — Pakistan’s most celebrated batter — only 91 runs across the tournament, well below acceptable standards for a player of his stature.
The decision to include Fakhar Zaman — who had been warming the bench throughout the group stage — is now being seriously discussed after Babar’s persistent failures. Bowling-wise, Usman Tariq’s 10 wickets have been Pakistan’s most potent weapon, and Shaheen Shah Afridi showed encouraging signs against England even in a losing cause. Pakistan’s squad for this match is: Salman Ali Agha (c), Babar Azam, Fakhar Zaman, Khawaja Nafay (wk), Sahibzada Farhan, Usman Khan (wk), Faheem Ashraf, Mohammad Nawaz, Saim Ayub, Shadab Khan, Abrar Ahmed, Naseem Shah, Salman Mirza, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Usman Tariq.
🇱🇰 Sri Lanka — Tournament Ended, Playing for Home Pride
Sri Lanka’s tournament has been a catastrophic fall from the heights of their opening match, when Pathum Nissanka scored a stunning century to defeat Australia. Since that win, Sri Lanka have lost four consecutive matches — to Zimbabwe, England, New Zealand, and now face Pakistan in a dead-rubber fixture. Their batting has completely collapsed after that Nissanka innings, and their bowling was brutally exposed by New Zealand’s batters in a 61-run defeat. Dasun Shanaka’s side are the first team eliminated from Super 8 Group 2. However, playing in front of a passionate home crowd at Pallekele, Sri Lanka will be highly motivated to end their campaign with a performance they can be proud of. Sri Lanka’s full squad: Dasun Shanaka (c), Kusal Mendis (wk), Kamil Mishara, Pathum Nissanka, Kusal Perera (wk), Charith Asalanka, Dushan Hemantha, Janith Liyanage, Kamindu Mendis, Dushmantha Chameera, Dilshan Madushanka, Pramod Madushan, Maheesh Theekshana, Dunith Wellalage, Pavan Rathnayake.
Predicted Playing XI — PAK vs SL, February 28
- 1 Sahibzada Farhan Opener
- 2 Fakhar Zaman Opener
- 3 Salman Ali Agha © BAT / Capt
- 4 Babar Azam BAT
- 5 Shadab Khan ALL
- 6 Usman Khan † WK / BAT
- 7 Mohammad Nawaz ALL
- 8 Faheem Ashraf ALL
- 9 Shaheen Shah Afridi BOWL
- 10 Usman Tariq BOWL
- 11 Abrar Ahmed BOWL
- 1 Pathum Nissanka Opener
- 2 Kusal Mendis † WK / Opener
- 3 Kamil Mishara BAT
- 4 Charith Asalanka BAT
- 5 Kamindu Mendis BAT / ALL
- 6 Janith Liyanage BAT
- 7 Dasun Shanaka © ALL / Capt
- 8 Dunith Wellalage ALL
- 9 Maheesh Theekshana BOWL
- 10 Dushmantha Chameera BOWL
- 11 Dilshan Madushanka BOWL
Head-to-Head Record — Pakistan vs Sri Lanka in T20Is
| Stat | 🇵🇰 Pakistan | 🇱🇰 Sri Lanka |
|---|---|---|
| Total T20I Meetings | 29 T20I Matches Played | |
| T20I Wins | 17 | 12 |
| Tournament Top Scorer | Farhan – 283 runs (5 matches) | Nissanka – century vs AUS |
| Tournament Top Bowler | Usman Tariq – 10 wickets | Theekshana / Wellalage |
| Super 8 Points | 1 point (1 washout, 1 loss) | 0 points (ELIMINATED) |
| Current NRR | -0.461 | -2.800 |
| Semi-Final Status | Must win big to qualify | Eliminated — playing for pride |
Pakistan hold a clear overall head-to-head advantage with 17 wins from 29 T20I meetings against Sri Lanka. However, history means very little when Pakistan need not just a win but a dominant, run-margin-driven victory against a home side motivated by pride. Sri Lanka’s record on home soil is considerably stronger than their away record, and even an eliminated team can be dangerous when playing in front of their own crowd.
Key Players to Watch — PAK vs SL
Sahibzada Farhan
The tournament’s leading run-scorer with 283 runs including a century and two fifties. For Pakistan to reach the 64-run winning margin they need, Farhan must produce a score of 80+ in rapid time. His form has been extraordinary — this is the match that tests whether he can replicate it when the entire nation is watching.
Usman Tariq
10 wickets in the tournament at excellent economy. His mystery action has consistently deceived batters at Sri Lankan venues throughout this T20 World Cup. At Pallekele, where the surface aids spinners in the middle overs, Tariq picking up 3–4 wickets could set up Pakistan’s massive victory target. He is Pakistan’s single biggest match-winner with the ball.
Pathum Nissanka
The man who destroyed Australia with a century in the group stage. Though Sri Lanka’s campaign has since collapsed, Nissanka’s individual form has remained dangerous. If he gets going at the start of Sri Lanka’s innings, he can score quickly enough to push the target beyond what Pakistan’s qualification math allows. He is the one batter Pakistan’s bowlers must remove early.
Maheesh Theekshana
Sri Lanka’s most reliable bowler in the Super 8, Theekshana’s off-spin has troubled top-order batters throughout this tournament. At Pallekele, where the surface aids slow bowling in the middle overs, he could be a significant obstacle to Pakistan’s required run rate. His ability to restrict scoring in overs 7–15 could be the difference between Pakistan reaching and falling short of their target.
Key Match-Ups & Battles
Fakhar Zaman + Sahibzada Farhan vs Sri Lanka’s New Ball Attack
The first six overs at Pallekele will define Pakistan’s entire innings. Dushmantha Chameera and Dilshan Madushanka will have new-ball movement available — if they pick up early wickets, Pakistan’s chase for the required run-margin becomes impossible. But if Farhan and Fakhar can attack from ball one and reach 60+ in the powerplay, Pakistan’s big-score target becomes achievable. The powerplay is everything — and Pakistan need their most attacking batting unit possible at the top.
Shaheen Shah Afridi vs Pathum Nissanka — First Over Swing
Pallekele offers Shaheen something Colombo’s R. Premadasa pitch rarely does: genuine swing with the new ball. If Shaheen nips one back into Nissanka or gets a thick outside edge in the first over, Sri Lanka lose their most dangerous batter immediately. Shaheen’s revival against England — where he bowled with genuine pace and rhythm — suggests he may be back to something close to his best. Removing Nissanka in the powerplay is Pakistan’s best tactical priority.
Usman Tariq vs Sri Lanka’s Middle Order (Overs 10–16)
This is Pakistan’s most likely path to a massive victory margin. If Sri Lanka are 2–3 down at the end of the powerplay, Tariq bowling with his mystery variations against a pressure-hit middle order at Pallekele becomes close to unplayable. His 10 wickets this tournament have predominantly come in the middle-overs phase — and Sri Lanka’s middle order, which has been consistently weak throughout the Super 8 stage, represents his best opportunity to rip through a batting card quickly and cheaply.
Match Prediction — Pakistan vs Sri Lanka, February 28
Pakistan will win this match. Sri Lanka are eliminated, demoralised after four losses, and facing a side that absolutely must perform at its highest level to survive. The Pakistani batting, led by Farhan and potentially Fakhar, has the firepower to post or chase large totals at a batter-friendly Pallekele pitch. Usman Tariq and Shaheen Shah Afridi give them the bowling quality to restrict Sri Lanka and create the winning margin they need.
The real question is not whether Pakistan win — but whether they win big enough. Beating Sri Lanka by 30 or 40 runs is meaningless if they need 64. The dew factor will influence the second innings significantly, which makes batting first and posting 180+ potentially the smarter tactical call for Pakistan, despite the pitch favouring chasers. Pakistan’s entire qualification mathematics depends on a dominant, clinical, high-margin performance — something they have delivered before (the Namibia demolition) but have struggled to sustain consistently.
Our Prediction: PAK vs SL, T20 World Cup 2026
Pakistan are strong favourites to win and will produce a performance worthy of their enormous talent. Whether they win by the exact margin needed to displace New Zealand on NRR depends on Farhan’s continued brilliance, Fakhar’s impact, and Tariq’s wicket-taking ability in the middle overs. A Pakistan win by a large margin is our prediction — whether it is large enough for semi-final qualification is the great unknown.
Frequently Asked Questions — PAK vs SL T20 World Cup 2026
Final Verdict — Pakistan vs Sri Lanka, T20 World Cup 2026
Saturday, February 28 at Pallekele is Pakistan’s moment of truth in the T20 World Cup 2026. The mathematics are simple and brutal: win by 64 runs or chase in 13 overs, or go home. Everything Pakistan’s talent, their squad depth, their tournament-long performances, their most exceptional individual in Sahibzada Farhan — it all comes down to this one match, on this one evening, at this one ground in Kandy. For Pakistan cricket fans, it does not get bigger than this. For complete qualification scenario details and exactly what happens under every possible outcome, read our full Pakistan semi-final qualification breakdown here. Do not miss a single ball of this match.
