Latest News
Ravindra, Santner, McConchie Lead Kiwis to Victory Over Sri Lanka
New Zealand's Mitchell Santner, Rachin Ravindra, and Cole McConchie led their team to a 61-run victory over Sri Lanka, eliminating the co-hosts from the T20 World Cup 2026. Santner scored 47 off 26 balls, while McConchie contributed 31 not out, and Ravindra took 4-27 with the ball, including key wickets of Dasun Shanaka and Kusal Mendis. Sri Lanka's chase faltered early, with Matt Henry dismissing Pathum Nissanka on the first ball, and they ended up scoring 107-8.
New Zealand's innings was on life support at 84/6, but Mitchell Santner and Cole McConchie turned it around with a blistering counterattack. McConchie sparked it off with a big over against Dushmantha Chameera, and Santner followed suit, flaying Maheesh Theekshana. The duo's 84-run partnership in just 47 balls is the highest seventh-wicket stand in T20 World Cup history, with 70 of those runs coming in the last four overs.
Punch-drunk Sri Lanka never got up off the floor following that flurry of attacks. The first ball of the innings saw them lose their talisman Pathum Nissanka to Matt Henry's inswinger, and Charith Asalanka fell in his following over. In response, Sri Lanka retreated into their shell as New Zealand strangled them with spin.
Rachin Ravindra only had a part-time role in India but he was thrust in as the main character. He responded with two wickets in his first over and rounded out his spell with 4 for 19 - his best T20I figures. The game was long done even as it meandered to a dispiriting conclusion for a crowd that had shown its side it was ready to play its part. As Sri Lanka limped to 107 for 8, and out of the tournament, the team itself simply couldn't keep up its end of the bargain.
New Zealand had the momentum at the halfway mark thanks to the Santner-McConchie stand, and Henry made sure it carried on uninterrupted. Off the first ball of the chase, he produced an unplayable inswinger that burst past Nissanka's inside edge to knock off the top of the stumps. It was the start of a wicket-maiden, and that dagger already plunged, he returned for his second to take another wicket to open the over. This time, it was Charith Asalanka, a listless heave merely ballooning up in the infield.
New Zealand's bowling performance in Colombo showed their adaptability. Shifting from Chennai's flat surfaces, they adjusted to Colombo's slower, turning tracks. They added Cole McConchie for James Neesham, boosting bowling depth, and Ish Sodhi played his first game, indicating they're flexible with their lineup.
Maheesh Theekshana had a rollercoaster of a day against New Zealand, initially dropping a catch of Tim Seifert, which drew criticism from bowler Dilshan Madushanka. However, he bounced back with a stunning performance, taking 3 wickets in 3 sensational overs, including Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra, and Mark Chapman, with his figures reading 3-0-9-3. Despite his early success, New Zealand's late counterattack, led by Mitchell Santner, took the wind out of his sails, with Santner scoring 21 runs off his last over.
New Zealand 168 for 7 (Santner 47, Ravindra 32, Theekshana 3-30, Chameera 3-38) beat Sri Lanka 107 for 8 (Kamindu 31, Wellalage 29, Ravindra 4-27, Henry 2-3) by 61 runs