Nissanka's Record Ton Powers Sri Lanka to Historic T20 Win Over Australia

Pathum Nissanka's blistering, unbeaten century off 52 balls guided Sri Lanka to a historic eight-wicket victory over Australia, chasing down a target of 182. This marked the highest successful run-chase for Sri Lanka in T20 World Cup history and was the first century ever scored against Australia in the tournament. The win, only Sri Lanka's third World Cup victory over Australia, secured their place in the Super Eights. Australia now faces potential elimination from the tournament, dependent on other group results.

Key Points: Nissanka Century Leads Sri Lanka to Historic T20 Win vs Australia

  • Highest successful chase for SL in T20 WCs
  • First T20 WC ton vs Australia
  • Third-ever SL World Cup win over Australia
  • Puts Australia on brink of elimination
3 min read

T20 World Cup: Nissanka's ton helps Sri Lanka break multiple records en route to historic win over Australia

Pathum Nissanka's unbeaten 52-ball century powers Sri Lanka to a record chase, defeating Australia and putting the Aussies on the brink of T20 World Cup elimination.

"Nissanka was named Player of the Match for scoring the first century of the tournament. - Match Report"

Pallekele, February 17

The co-hosts Sri Lanka defeated Australia by eight wickets in their group-stage fixture at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium on Monday, entering the Super Eights and putting the Mitch Marsh-led side on the brink of elimination from the ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026.

Pathum Nissanka's unbeaten ton off just 52 balls helped Sri Lanka chase down a daunting target of 182 runs, which is also the highest successful run-chase for Sri Lanka in T20 World Cups. That was also the highest successful run-chase against Australia in the T20 World Cups.

The 27-year-old Nissanka was named Player of the Match for scoring the first century of the tournament. This was also the first time that someone had hit a century against Australia in a T20 World Cup match. The previous highest score was 94 by Pakistan's Umar Akmal in 2014 at Mirpur.

This was only the third time a Sri Lankan side had defeated Australia in a World Cup. The first came in the 1996 ODI World Cup Final in Lahore, and the second in Nottingham at the 2009 T20 World Cup.

Nissanka's 52-ball ton was the joint-second fastest century by a Sri Lankan batter in T20Is. He equalled his earlier record of a 52-ball ton, which he made against India in Dubai last year. Kusal Perera has the record for the fastest T20I ton by a Sri Lankan batter, which he made against New Zealand in just 44 balls last year in Nelson.

Nissanka's unbeaten century was the second hundred by a Sri Lankan batter in the T20 World Cups. The first ton was hit by former captain Mahela Jayawardene (100) against Zimbabwe in the 2010 edition.

In 87 matches and 86 innings, Nissanka has scored 2,574 runs at an average of 31.77, with a strike rate of 128.63, with two centuries and 18 fifties and a best score of 107.

Coming to the match, Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to field first. An 104-run stand between a returning skipper, Mitchell Marsh (54 in 27 balls, with eight fours and two sixes) started things for Australia, but Aussies could not make the most of this perfect headstart as they were skittled out for 181 runs in 20 overs, with Josh Inglis (27 in 22 balls, with three fours) and Glenn Maxwell (22 in 15 balls, with a four and a six) being the only ones to touch the 20-run mark later.

Dushan Hemantha (3/37 in four overs) and Dushmantha Chameera (2/36 in four overs) were the top bowlers for Sri Lanka.

In the run chase, Perera fell early, but Nissanka (100* in 52 balls, with 10 fours and five sixes), Kusal Mendis (51 in 38 balls, with six fours and a six), and Pavan Rathnayake (28* in 15 balls, with six fours) took Sri Lanka to the target with eight wickets and two overs left.

Australia are third in the group with one win and two losses, behind table-toppers SL and Zimbabwe, who have won both their matches. If Zimbabwe win their clash against Ireland on Tuesday, the Aussies will be out of the tournament.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Incredible chase! 182 with 2 overs to spare is just brutal. Sri Lanka played fearless cricket. Australia's bowling looked toothless. This World Cup is full of surprises already.
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Rohit P
Respectful criticism: While Nissanka was brilliant, Australia's fielding and death bowling were poor. They gave away too many easy boundaries. Marsh's captaincy in the middle overs was questionable. A champion side shouldn't collapse like that after a 100-run opening stand.
S
Sarah B
Watching from the US, this is why I love T20 cricket! A century in 52 balls is just insane entertainment. The stadium atmosphere in Pallekele looked electric. Congrats to Sri Lanka!
K
Karthik V
Historic win indeed! Beating Australia in a World Cup is always special. Nissanka and Mendis' partnership was a masterclass. Feeling a bit nostalgic about the 1996 final mention. Sri Lanka is a dark horse for the title.
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Michael C
As an Aussie fan, this is tough to watch. Our batting depth means nothing if the middle order keeps failing. Maxwell needs to step up. All eyes on Zimbabwe vs Ireland now. The tournament isn't over yet!

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