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Updated Jun 27, 2026 · 07:15
Cricket News Updated Jun 27, 2026

Athapaththu Blitz, Silva Finish Keep Sri Lanka's Semifinal Hopes Alive

Sri Lanka defeated Scotland by three wickets in a thrilling Women's T20 World Cup match, keeping their semifinal hopes alive. Captain Chamari Athapaththu blasted 33 off 16 balls to give Sri Lanka a flying start in their chase of 152. Nilakshika Silva remained calm under pressure with an unbeaten 21 to guide her team home with one ball to spare. This victory marked Sri Lanka's first-ever three wins in a single Women's T20 World Cup tournament.

Women's T20 WC: Athapaththu's blazing start, Nilakshika's calm finish keep Sri Lanka's semis hope alive

Manchester, June 27

Captain Chamari Athapaththu's explosive start and Nilakshika Silva's composed unbeaten finish helped Sri Lanka pull off their highest successful chase in ICC Women's T20 World Cup history, edging Scotland by three wickets with one ball to spare to keep their semi-final hopes alive on Saturday.

The stunning win also saw Sri Lanka register their first-ever three victories in a single Women's T20 World Cup tournament, to jump to third spot in Group B. England have already booked their semi-final berth, with Sri Lanka joining West Indies and New Zealand in the race for the second spot in the group.

Having been put to bat first, Scotland were off to a slow start but managed to post a competitive 151 for six on the back of contributions from Sarah Bryce and Ailsa Lister.

Darcey Carter, Scotland's leading run-getter in the competition, made a patient 34-ball 36 to ensure their stay through the opening spell. However, the slower bowlers of Sri Lanka put up a strong show as boundaries dried up and Scotland could only manage 67 for two by the halfway mark.

The impetus was provided in the late stages through a 53-run fourth-wicket partnership between Lister and Sarah Bryce. The former struck four boundaries during a quick 26 before being run out by a direct throw from Nilakshika Silva and Scotland from 138 for four, slipped to 146 for six before Sarah Bryce kept one end up with an excellent undefeated 47 off 33 deliveries laced with six boundaries including a sweet cover drive to wrap the innings up.

Sri Lanka were outstanding in the field with Mithali Ayodhya being rewarded with two wickets, while Kavisha Dilhari finished with encouraging figures of 1 for 19 from her full four-overs. Two run outs put paid to Scotland's dreams of topping the 150-run mark.

Needing not just victory but also a quick win in the chase to boost their Net Run Rate, Sri Lanka came out of the blocks with aggressive intent.

Athapaththu, fresh off a century in her last innings without being dismissed, launched into a destructive spell at the top with six boundaries and a six off just 16 deliveries as her onslaught took the powerplay score to 65, the highest for the team in the competition before she was clean bowled by Katherine Fraser in the sixth over.

Scotland responded through Fraser and the captain Kathryn Bryce, who along with Rachel Slater picked two wickets each and helped their team to restrict Sri Lanka to 118 for six after 15 overs.

However, Nilakshika Silva held her nerves to finish with a valuable unbeaten 21 to shepherd the lower order through the tough finish. The match was into the last over, and things took an ugly turn when Slater, running in to bowl, was cramped with an injury and forced to abandon her spell.

With a lot at stake, Sugandika Kumari kept her cool to hit the winning boundary through the gap at short third with Sri Lanka reaching the target by three wickets with a delivery left in their pockets to keep their dreams alive.

Brief scores: Scotland 151/6 in 20 overs (Sarah Bryce 47*, Darcey Carter 34; Mithali Ayodhya 2-34) lost to Sri Lanka 154/7 in 19.5 overs (Chamari Athapaththu 33, Nilakshi Silva 21*; Katherine Fraser 2-25, Kathryn Bryce 2-28) by 3 wickets

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

That injury to Rachel Slater in the final over must have been nerve-wracking for Scotland. But full credit to Sugandika Kumari for keeping her cool and hitting the winning boundary. This is why we love T20 cricket—thrilling till the last ball! India could learn from this kind of finishing ability. 🏏🔥

Vikram M

Nice to see associate nations like Scotland competing well. Sarah Bryce's 47* was a class act. But honestly, Sri Lanka's fielding was the difference—those two run-outs were crucial. For India, we need to work on our fielding standards if we want to dominate world tournaments. Good lesson from our neighbours.

Rohan X

Chamari Athapaththu is basically a one-woman army for Sri Lanka! 33 off 16 balls—that's the kind of intent we need to see more of in women's cricket. And Nilakshika's calm finish shows great temperament. If only our Indian team showed this much fight in crunch moments. Well played, Lanka! 🌟

Deepak U

Respect to Scotland for pushing Sri Lanka to the wire. But honestly, Sri Lanka should have chased this down more comfortably given their firepower. The middle-order collapse was concerning. Still, a win is a win, and they're still in the semis race. Exciting times for women's cricket in Asia! 🇮🇳🇱🇰

Ananya R

That moment when Slater got injured mid-over—such a tough break for Scotland. But Sri Lanka showed great game

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