Table of Contents
The Sri Lanka vs Pakistan cricket rivalry is one of Asia’s most electric and enduring battles, blending raw aggression, tactical brilliance, and unforgettable drama since their first Test in 1982. What began as Pakistan’s dominant era has evolved into a fiercely competitive saga—marked by Sri Lanka’s stunning 1996 World Cup rise, Muralitharan’s spin mastery, explosive T20 clashes, and recent high-stakes ODIs where Babar Azam and Shaheen Afridi shine. From record-breaking centuries and nail-biting chases to fan-fueled passion in packed stadiums, every encounter carries history, pride, and unfinished business. This is more than cricket; it’s a generational story of fire and respect.
Recent Sri Lanka National Cricket Team Vs Pakistan National Cricket Team
| Tournament | Venue | Date | Toss | Sri Lanka Score | Pakistan Score | Result | Series | Player of the Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilateral T20I | Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla | Jan 11, 2026 | Not specified (rain-reduced to 12 overs) | 160/6 (12 overs) | 146/8 (12 overs) | Sri Lanka won by 14 runs | Pakistan tour of Sri Lanka T20I | Wanindu Hasaranga (4/35) |
| Bilateral T20I | Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla | Jan 9, 2026 | – | – | – | Match abandoned without a ball bowled (rain) | Pakistan tour of Sri Lanka T20I | – |
| Bilateral T20I | Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla | Jan 7, 2026 | Pakistan elected to field | 128 (19.2 overs) | 129/4 (16.4 overs) | Pakistan won by 6 wickets (20 balls remaining) | Pakistan tour of Sri Lanka T20I | Salman Mirza (key wickets in powerplay) |
| Bilateral ODI | Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium | Nov 16, 2025 | Not specified | 211 | 215/4 | Pakistan won by 6 wickets | Sri Lanka tour of Pakistan ODI | Not specified (Pakistan’s chase dominance) |
| Bilateral ODI | Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium | Nov 14, 2025 | Not specified | 288/8 (50 overs) | 289/2 (48.2 overs) | Pakistan won by 8 wickets | Sri Lanka tour of Pakistan ODI | Babar Azam (century anchor) |
| Bilateral ODI | Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium | Nov 11, 2025 | Not specified | 293/9 (50 overs) | 299/5 (50 overs) | Pakistan won by 6 runs | Sri Lanka tour of Pakistan ODI | Not specified (tight defense) |
| Asia Cup Super 4 | Pallekele/Colombo | Sep 2023 | Not specified | Target adjusted (DLS) | – | Sri Lanka won by DLS method | Asia Cup 2023 | Not specified (rain-aided thriller) |
| Asia Cup Super 4 | Dubai | Sep 2022 | Not specified | – | – | Sri Lanka won by 23 runs | Asia Cup 2022 | Pathum Nissanka / Bhanuka Rajapaksa (chase heroes) |
| Bilateral T20I | Lahore | Oct 9, 2019 | Not specified | – | – | Sri Lanka won by 13 runs | Sri Lanka tour of Pakistan T20I | Not specified (bowling hold) |
| Bilateral T20I | Lahore | Oct 7, 2019 | Not specified | 182/6 | 147 | Sri Lanka won by 35 runs | Sri Lanka tour of Pakistan T20I | Danushka Gunathilaka (aggressive top order) |
| Bilateral T20I | Lahore | Oct 5, 2019 | Not specified | 165/5 | 101 | Sri Lanka won by 64 runs | Sri Lanka tour of Pakistan T20I | Danushka Gunathilaka (match-defining) |
| T20I Bilateral | Dubai/Abu Dhabi | Oct 2018 | Not specified | – | – | Pakistan won (series edge) | UAE series | Not specified (pace dominance) |
| T20 World Cup SF | St Lucia | May 2010 | Not specified | 158/6 | 142/6 | Sri Lanka won by 16 runs | T20 World Cup 2010 | Lasith Malinga (death bowling) |
| T20 World Cup Final | Lord’s | Jun 2009 | Not specified | 138/6 | 139/2 | Pakistan won by 8 wickets | T20 World Cup 2009 | Shahid Afridi (54*) |
| Test | Galle | Jul 2009 | Not specified | – | – | Sri Lanka won by 50 runs | Pakistan tour of Sri Lanka Test | Nuwan Kulasekara (swing masterclass) |
Big Moments, Drama & Heroics
This rivalry has delivered countless heart-stopping moments that transcend scores and stats. From record-shattering heroics to gut-wrenching drama, these stand out as the defining sparks that keep fans talking for years.
Shahid Afridi’s Explosive Debut Century (1996, Nairobi) A 16-year-old Boom Boom exploded onto the scene with the then-fastest ODI hundred off just 37 balls against Sri Lanka in the KCA Centenary Tournament. His 102 included 11 sixes and 6 fours, powering Pakistan to 371 and a massive win. It announced a new era of aggressive cricket and remains one of the most iconic individual knocks in rivalry history.
Aravinda de Silva’s Match-Winning Magic (Various 1990s Clashes) Mad Max often tormented Pakistan bowlers. In thrilling chases like the 1997 contest where Sri Lanka recovered from 68/2 to chase 280+, his elegant yet destructive batting turned games single-handedly, showcasing Sri Lanka’s growing confidence.
2009 T20 World Cup Final Triumph (Lord’s) Pakistan’s underdogs lifted the trophy in emotional fashion. Sri Lanka posted 138/6 with Sangakkara’s gritty 64*, but Umar Gul’s death bowling (crucial wickets) and Shahid Afridi’s unbeaten 54* sealed an 8-wicket chase. Amid national pride post-2009 Lahore attack scars, it became Pakistan’s greatest limited-overs glory.
Historic Test Series Wins and Chases Sri Lanka’s first Test series victory in Pakistan (1999/00, 2-1) featured Rawalpindi’s tense 2-wicket chase. Pakistan hit back with remarkable fourth-innings 300+ chases in 2014 Sharjah and 2015 Pallekele, defying logic with composure under pressure.
Asia Cup Nail-Biters Recent drama includes Sri Lanka’s 2022 T20 final upset over dominant Pakistan and the 2023 DLS thriller where Sri Lanka edged a Super Four clash. These matches blend tactical battles, late collapses, and heroic stands that fuel ongoing fire.
Key Player Stats Analysis
The Sri Lanka vs Pakistan rivalry isn’t just about team wins—it’s built on legendary individual battles that have produced jaw-dropping numbers, heartbreaking collapses, and career-defining performances. From spin wizards tearing through lineups to elegant batsmen piling on runs when it mattered most, these stats reveal why matches between these two always feel personal. Let’s break it down with the standout performers who have owned this fixture across formats.
Batting Legends Who Tormented the Opposition
Kumar Sangakkara was Pakistan’s absolute nightmare. The elegant left-hander feasted on their bowling like no one else: in Tests, he smashed 2,911 runs in 23 matches at a staggering average of 74.64, including 10 centuries and 12 fifties, with a highest of 230. In ODIs, he added another 2,809 runs at 80.25 across 21 games. Remember his match-winning knocks in the 2000s? Sanga’s calm under pressure turned potential defeats into Sri Lankan triumphs time and again.
On the current side, Babar Azam has quietly become Sri Lanka’s biggest headache. In ODIs alone, he’s scored over 700 runs (updated through 2025 series) at an average above 60, with multiple centuries—including a classy 102* in the recent Rawalpindi chase that sealed Pakistan’s 3-0 sweep. His Test record includes gritty hundreds like 119 off 244 balls, anchoring innings when Pakistan needed it most. Babar’s ability to pace chases against Sri Lankan spinners makes him the modern king of this matchup.
Mohammad Rizwan has exploded in limited-overs: over 400 runs in recent clashes, often finishing games with calm, wicket-keeper batter flair that frustrates Sri Lankan bowlers.
Bowling Masters Who Changed Games Single-Handedly
Muttiah Muralitharan owns the record for most wickets in this rivalry. The wizard took a monstrous 80 Test wickets against Pakistan in just 16 matches at 25.46, with six five-wicket hauls—including a magical 10-wicket match in Peshawar 2000. In ODIs, he grabbed dozens more, reaching his 500th career wicket while crushing Pakistan. His doosra and variations on turning tracks left Pakistani batsmen clueless, swinging entire series Sri Lanka’s way.
For Pakistan, Shaheen Shah Afridi is the new destroyer. The left-arm swing king has picked up wickets in bunches against Sri Lanka—highlighted by multiple 3-wicket hauls, including in the 2025 Tri-Nation final and Asia Cup clashes. His ability to swing it both ways at pace dismantles top orders, like clean-bowling openers in powerplays. In the recent ODI series, his control helped restrict Sri Lanka repeatedly.
Lasith Malinga was Sri Lanka’s yorker machine in white-ball cricket, snaring key Pakistani scalps with slingers that dipped late. Wanindu Hasaranga continues that legacy today, ripping through middle orders with googlies—think his 4/35 in the rain-hit Dambulla T20.
Quick-Hit Tables of All-Time Dominators
Most Runs in Tests (Sri Lanka vs Pakistan)
| Player | Team | Matches | Runs | Average | 100s | Highest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kumar Sangakkara | Sri Lanka | 23 | 2911 | 74.64 | 10 | 230 |
| Younis Khan | Pakistan | 18 | 1718 | 61.35 | 5 | 313 |
| Mahela Jayawardene | Sri Lanka | 20 | 1650 | 41.25 | 4 | 240 |
Most Wickets in Tests
| Player | Team | Matches | Wickets | Average | 5W Hauls |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Muttiah Muralitharan | Sri Lanka | 16 | 80 | 25.46 | 6 |
| Wasim Akram | Pakistan | 12 | 45 | 23.20 | 3 |
| Abdul Qadir | Pakistan | 10 | 38 | 28.50 | 2 |
Standouts in ODIs & T20Is (Recent Era)
| Player | Format | Runs/Wickets vs Opponent | Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Babar Azam | ODI | 700+ runs | 2 centuries in 2025 series |
| Mohammad Rizwan | T20I | 403 runs | Clutch finisher |
| Shaheen Afridi | All | 25+ wickets | Multiple 3-fers in big games |
| Wanindu Hasaranga | T20I | 20+ wickets | 8 wickets in 2019 Lahore sweep |
The Dawn of Rivalry – Pakistan’s Early Dominance (1982–1995)
When Sri Lanka stepped onto the Test stage in 1982, freshly minted as the eighth full member of the ICC, their first proper international opponents were Pakistan. It wasn’t just a series; it marked the birth of a rivalry that would grow fiercer over decades. Sri Lanka arrived as underdogs—eager, talented, but inexperienced against a Pakistan side brimming with world-class talent like Imran Khan, Javed Miandad, Wasim Raja, and spinners Abdul Qadir and Iqbal Qasim. The early clashes highlighted the gulf: Pakistan’s disciplined bowling and resilient batting routinely overwhelmed Sri Lanka’s fragile lineup.
The inaugural Test in Karachi (March 1982) set the tone. Pakistan posted 396, led by Haroon Rasheed’s 153, then declared at 301/4 in the second innings. Sri Lanka fought back with 344 in the first dig—Sidath Wettimuny top-scored—but crumbled to 149 chasing 354, handing Pakistan a 204-run win. Imran’s all-round mastery shone through. The Lahore Test saw Pakistan crush Sri Lanka by an innings and 102 runs after bowling them out for 240 and 158, with Mohsin Khan and Zaheer Abbas piling on runs. Faisalabad’s draw offered brief respite, but Pakistan took the series 2-0.
Subsequent tours in 1985/86 saw similar patterns—Pakistan’s home fortress proved tough. Sri Lanka showed grit with tall scores like 479 in Faisalabad (drawn), yet lost the series 2-0. By the early 1990s, Sri Lanka improved slightly, forcing more draws, but Pakistan still held sway, winning decisively in Colombo 1994 by 301 runs. ODIs mirrored this: Pakistan dominated bilateral clashes, winning big margins like 192 runs in 1982 Karachi.
| Year | Format | Venue | Match Result | Key Performances / Margin | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1982 | Test | Karachi (1st) | Pak 396 & 301/4d bt SL 344 & 149 | Haroon Rasheed 153; Pak won by 204 runs | Pakistan |
| 1982 | Test | Faisalabad (2nd) | Drawn (Pak 454 & 154/8d; SL 270 & 186/7) | High scores, no result | Draw |
| 1982 | Test | Lahore (3rd) | Pak 500/7d bt SL 240 & 158 | Innings & 102 runs win | Pakistan |
| 1982 | ODI | Karachi (1st) | Pak bt SL by 8 wkts | SL 171/3 (33 ov); Pak chased easily | Pakistan |
| 1985/86 | Test | Faisalabad (1st) | Drawn (SL 479; Pak 555/3) | Massive totals; no result | Draw |
| 1985/86 | Test | Sialkot (2nd) | Pak bt SL by 8 wkts | Pak chased low target | Pakistan |
| 1991/92 | Test | Sialkot (1st) | Drawn (SL 270 & 137/5; Pak 423/5d) | Defensive battle | Draw |
| 1994 | Test | Colombo (PSS, 1st) | Pak bt SL by 301 runs | Pak 390 & 318/4d; SL 226 & 181 | Pakistan |
| 1995 | Test | Faisalabad | SL bt Pak by 42 runs | Early sign of shift (SL 333 & 209; Pak 223 & 361) | Sri Lanka |
| Various | ODI | Multiple (1982-95) | Pakistan won majority | Big margins like 192 runs (1982) | Pakistan dominant |
Sparks Ignite – Sri Lanka’s Emergence and Tense 1990s Battles (1996–2000)
The mid-to-late 1990s marked a seismic shift in the Sri Lanka-Pakistan rivalry. Sri Lanka, fresh off their stunning 1996 World Cup triumph, shed their underdog tag and started punching above their weight. Sanath Jayasuriya and Romesh Kaluwitharana’s explosive opening stands redefined ODI cricket, while Aravinda de Silva and Arjuna Ranatunga brought flair and steel. Pakistan, still a powerhouse with Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Saeed Anwar, and emerging talents like Shahid Afridi, refused to yield easily. Tension boiled over in high-stakes clashes, with crowds roaring and controversies flaring.
The 1996 World Cup quarter-final saw Sri Lanka edge Pakistan in a rain-affected thriller, but Pakistan struck back in ODIs like the Nairobi Centenary match where Afridi smashed a then-record 102 off 37 balls (wait, actually 40 balls in some records, but blistering). Sri Lanka’s 1996/97 home Test series against Pakistan ended drawn, showing growing parity. The 1997 Pepsi Independence Cup finals in India saw Sri Lanka dominate, winning both with Jayasuriya’s fireworks. By 1999/2000, Sri Lanka toured Pakistan and pulled off a historic 2-1 Test series win, their first in Pakistan—Rawalpindi’s nail-biting 2-wicket chase sealed by Marvan Atapattu and co. ODIs followed suit with Sri Lanka sweeping 3-0. Pakistan responded fiercely in the return 2000 home series, winning two Tests convincingly. Fan passion surged: Sri Lankan supporters celebrated the rise, while Pakistani crowds demanded revenge. Tactics evolved—Sri Lanka’s spin duo of Muralitharan and Pushpakumara challenged Pakistan’s pace, and aggressive batting under lights created electric atmospheres. These years transformed the rivalry from one-sided to fiercely contested.
| Year | Format | Venue/Series | Match Result | Key Performances / Margin | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | ODI | Wills World Cup QF (various) | SL bt Pak (details in group stages/QF context) | SL’s WC momentum starts | Sri Lanka (overall WC path) |
| 1996 | ODI | Nairobi (KCA Centenary) | Pak 371/9 bt SL 289 | Shahid Afridi 102 off 40 balls (fastest 100 then) | Pakistan |
| 1996/97 | Test | Pakistan in SL (2 Tests) | Series drawn 0-0 | High-scoring draws; SL shows grit | Draw |
| 1997 | ODI | Pepsi Independence Cup Finals (India) | SL bt Pak in both finals (1st: 339/4 vs 224; 2nd: 309 vs 224) | Jayasuriya fireworks; SL wins series | Sri Lanka |
| 1999/00 | Test | SL in Pak (3 Tests) | SL wins 2-1 | Rawalpindi: SL 220/8 chase (2 wkts); historic first series win in Pak | Sri Lanka |
| 1999/00 | ODI | SL in Pak (3 ODIs) | SL wins 3-0 | Dominant chases; Atapattu shines | Sri Lanka |
| 2000 | Test | Pak in SL (3 Tests) | Pak wins 2-0 (1 drawn) | Galle: innings & 163; Colombo: 5 wkts; Kandy draw | Pakistan |
| Various | ODI | Multinationals/Bilaterals | Mixed, but SL gains edge | Explosive batting vs pace attacks | Competitive shift |
Peak Intensity – Golden Era Clashes and Mutual Respect (2001–2009)
The 2000s represented the golden peak of the Sri Lanka-Pakistan rivalry, where both sides reached world-class heights and traded blows with fierce intensity and growing mutual respect. Sri Lanka, powered by the spin wizardry of Muttiah Muralitharan and batting depth from Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara, and Sanath Jayasuriya, challenged Pakistan’s all-round might featuring Inzamam-ul-Haq, Younis Khan, Shoaib Akhtar, Umar Gul, and emerging stars like Shahid Afridi. Player rivalries burned bright—Murali’s doosra tormented Pakistani batsmen, while Inzamam’s elegant drives often neutralized spin threats.
Key series saw balance: Pakistan’s 2002 Asian Test Championship final win over Sri Lanka showcased Inzamam’s grit, but Sri Lanka hit back in high-scoring ODIs and Tests. The 2004/05 Pakistan tour featured drawn battles amid spin duels. By 2008/09 in Pakistan, two Tests ended drawn before tragedy struck with the Lahore terror attack on the Sri Lankan team bus, halting play and leaving deep scars—yet the rivalry endured.
The pinnacle arrived in 2009’s T20 World Cup final at Lord’s: Sri Lanka posted 138/6 (Sangakkara’s 64*), but Pakistan chased comfortably with 8 wickets in hand, Afridi’s explosive 54* sealing victory amid national pride. Earlier that year, Pakistan’s tour of Sri Lanka saw the hosts dominate Tests 2-0, with Kulasekara’s swing and Murali’s guile dismantling Pakistan. ODIs swung both ways in thrilling chases.
| Year | Format | Venue/Series | Match Result | Key Performances / Margin | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001/02 | ODI | Sharjah (various, incl. final) | Pak dominant in tri-series | Inzamam-ul-Haq centuries; Waqar Younis wickets | Pakistan edge |
| 2002 | Test | Asian Test Championship Final (Lahore) | Pak bt SL by innings & 175 runs | Inzamam grit; spin mastery | Pakistan |
| 2004/05 | Test | Pak in SL (2 Tests) | Series 1-1 (1 drawn) | High-scoring; Murali vs Inzamam duels | Drawn series |
| 2005/06 | Test | SL in Pak (2 Tests) | Pak 1-0 (1 drawn) | Younis Khan runs; pace attacks | Pakistan |
| 2008/09 | Test | SL in Pak (2 Tests) | Series drawn 0-0 | Post-attack abandonment; resilience shown | Draw |
| 2009 | Test | Pak in SL (3 Tests) | SL wins 2-0 (1 drawn) | Galle: SL by 50 runs; Kulasekara 4-fers; Murali key | Sri Lanka |
| 2009 | ODI | Pak in SL (5 ODIs) | SL wins 3-2 | Close finishes; Murali 32* off 15 in one | Sri Lanka |
| 2009 | T20I | ICC World T20 Final (Lord’s) | Pak bt SL by 8 wkts | SL 138/6 (Sangakkara 64*); Pak 139/2 (Afridi 54*) | Pakistan |
| Various | Mixed | Multinationals/Bilaterals | Intense back-and-forth | Murali’s wickets vs Pakistani batting firepower | Mutual respect era |
The T20 Revolution – High-Stakes Drama in the 2010s (2010–2019)
The 2010s turned the Sri Lanka-Pakistan rivalry into pure T20 fireworks, as the format exploded globally and bilateral clashes plus Asia Cup thrillers delivered non-stop drama. Neutral venues in the UAE became battlegrounds where Pakistan’s explosive batting—Shahid Afridi, Umar Akmal, Ahmed Shehzad—clashed with Sri Lanka’s death-bowling wizards like Lasith Malinga and Angelo Mathews. Sri Lanka leaned on tactical nous, spin variations, and calm chases, while Pakistan thrived on raw power and unpredictability.
Key moments lit up the decade: the 2010 T20 World Cup semi-final saw Sri Lanka edge Pakistan in a tense low-scorer. In 2011 UAE series, Pakistan snatched thrilling wins, like a last-over finish in Abu Dhabi. Asia Cup encounters swung wildly, but the 2017/18 Lahore series showcased Pakistan’s resurgence post-insecurity, with high chases and crowd frenzy. The 2019 tour to Pakistan marked a landmark—Sri Lanka swept the T20Is 3-0 in Lahore, with Danushka Gunathilaka’s aggression and bowlers dismantling Pakistan’s lineup in dominant fashion, including a 64-run thrashing in the opener.
Fan aggression peaked in packed stadiums: roars for sixes, jeers at collapses, and electric atmospheres under lights. Tactics evolved—Pakistan’s pace vs Sri Lanka’s yorkers created pressure cookers. These years cemented T20 as the rivalry’s heartbeat, blending skill, controversy, and sheer entertainment that kept fans glued.
| Year | Format/Series | Venue/Key Match | Match Result | Key Performances / Margin | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | T20 World Cup SF | St Lucia | SL bt Pak by 16 runs | SL 158/6; Pak 142/6; Malinga death mastery | Sri Lanka |
| 2011/12 | T20I Series (UAE) | Abu Dhabi/Dubai | Pak wins series (mixed results) | Thrilling last-over finishes; Afridi fireworks | Pakistan edge |
| 2012 | Asia Cup T20 (various) | Bangladesh | Competitive group clashes | High-scoring; spin vs pace battles | Mixed |
| 2013/14 | T20I Series (UAE) | Dubai/Abu Dhabi | Pak dominant | Record run-fests; Umar Akmal aggression | Pakistan |
| 2015 | T20I (bilateral) | Colombo | Close contests | Mathews all-round heroics | Competitive |
| 2017/18 | T20I Series (Pakistan) | Lahore | Pak wins 3-0 | Post-return crowds roar; Babar Azam rises | Pakistan |
| 2019 | T20I Series (Pakistan) | Lahore | SL wins 3-0 | 1st: SL 165/5 bt Pak 101 (64 runs); Gunathilaka stars | Sri Lanka |
| 2019 | 2nd T20I | Lahore | SL bt Pak by 35 runs | SL 182/6; Pak 147; dominant chase defense | Sri Lanka |
| 2019 | 3rd T20I | Lahore | SL bt Pak by 13 runs | Tight finish; SL’s bowling holds nerve | Sri Lanka |
| Various | Asia Cup/World T20 | Multiple | Back-and-forth thrillers | Malinga yorkers vs Pakistani big hitters | Intense era |
Contemporary Fire – Unfinished Business in the 2020s (2020–Present)
The 2020s have kept the Sri Lanka-Pakistan rivalry smoldering with unfinished business, blending bilateral grit, Asia Cup drama, and multi-nation tournaments amid shifting fortunes. Post-pandemic cricket resumed cautiously, but passion never dipped—crowds in Lahore and Colombo erupted for every boundary, while online fans fueled heated debates over tactics and stars.
Early 2020s saw Pakistan’s resurgence: they dominated the 2021 Asia Cup encounter and edged close T20s. Sri Lanka struck back in 2022 Asia Cup with a thrilling chase, Pathum Nissanka and Bhanuka Rajapaksa shining. Shaheen Afridi’s lethal swing often tormented Sri Lankan top order, countered by Wanindu Hasaranga’s mystery spin ripping through Pakistan’s middle. The 2023 Asia Cup delivered a Super Four nail-biter where Sri Lanka sneaked a DLS win.
Bilateral fire intensified: Pakistan’s 2023 home T20s were competitive, but Sri Lanka’s spinners held nerve in chases. The 2025 tour to Pakistan flipped the script—Pakistan swept the ODI series 3-0 in Rawalpindi, with clinical chases (289/2 in second ODI) showcasing Babar Azam’s class and Shaheen’s control. The tri-nation T20 series mixed results: Pakistan won key games, but Sri Lanka pulled off tight victories like a 6-run thriller. Emerging talents clash—Naseem Shah’s pace vs Matheesha Pathirana’s slingy yorkers create must-watch moments.
Fan aggression simmers: packed stadiums roar, social media buzzes with memes and rival taunts. Tactics focus on death overs and spin mastery in subcontinent conditions. With ongoing tours and tournaments, this era promises more high-stakes unfinished chapters.
| Year | Format/Series | Venue/Key Match | Match Result | Key Performances / Margin | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019/20 | T20I Series (carryover) | Lahore | SL wins 3-0 | Bhanuka Rajapaksa aggression; SL dominance | Sri Lanka |
| 2021 | Asia Cup T20 | UAE (various) | Competitive; Pak edge in key games | Babar Azam anchors; close finishes | Pakistan edge |
| 2022 | Asia Cup T20 Super 4 | Dubai | SL bt Pak by 23 runs | Nissanka/Bhanuka chase; SL momentum | Sri Lanka |
| 2023 | Asia Cup Super 4 | Colombo/Pallekele | SL bt Pak (DLS method) | Tight rain-affected; SL sneaks win | Sri Lanka |
| 2023 | T20I Bilateral | Various | Mixed results | Hasaranga spin vs Shaheen pace | Competitive |
| 2025 | ODI Series (SL in Pak) | Rawalpindi | Pak wins 3-0 | 1st: Pak 299/5 bt SL 293/9 (6 runs); 2nd: Pak 289/2 chase; 3rd: Pak 215/4 bt SL 211 | Pakistan |
| 2025 | T20I Tri-Nation Series | Rawalpindi | Mixed; Pak wins final by 6 wkts | SL 184/5 bt Pak 178/7 (6 runs in one); Nawaz all-round heroics in final | Mixed/Pak final |
| 2025/26 | Ongoing/Recent T20s | Various | Back-and-forth | Emerging stars shine; tight margins | Unfinished |
| Various | Multinationals/Asia Cup | Multiple | Intense, swinging rivalry | Shaheen/Naseem vs Hasaranga/Pathirana duels | Ongoing fire |
Conclusion
The Sri Lanka vs Pakistan cricket rivalry stands as one of Asia’s most captivating sagas, evolving from Pakistan’s early dominance in the 1980s to a balanced, high-octane contest filled with iconic moments. Muralitharan’s wizardry, Sangakkara’s elegance, Afridi’s explosiveness, and Babar Azam’s poise have defined eras, while nail-biting chases, spin duels, and T20 thrillers keep fans hooked. Beyond stats and scorecards, it’s a story of mutual respect forged through fierce competition, passionate crowds, and shared history. As emerging stars clash and unfinished business lingers, this rivalry promises more drama, heroics, and unforgettable chapters for generations to come. (98 words)
FAQs
Who has the overall head-to-head advantage in Tests?
Pakistan leads with more wins historically, but Sri Lanka’s breakthroughs (like their first series win in Pakistan in 1999/00) have narrowed the gap significantly over time.
What is the most famous match in this rivalry?
The 2009 T20 World Cup final at Lord’s, where Pakistan chased Sri Lanka’s 138/6 with 8 wickets in hand, thanks to Shahid Afridi’s unbeaten 54*, remains the most iconic.
Which player has the best individual record against the other team?
Kumar Sangakkara dominates with 2,911 Test runs at 74.64 and 2,809 ODI runs at 80.25 against Pakistan, while Muttiah Muralitharan took 80 Test wickets at 25.46.
When did Sri Lanka first win a Test series in Pakistan?
In 1999/00, Sri Lanka achieved their historic 2-1 series victory in Pakistan, highlighted by a tense 2-wicket chase in Rawalpindi.
What makes recent matches so exciting?
Modern clashes feature explosive T20s, tight ODIs, and tactical battles like Shaheen Afridi’s swing vs Wanindu Hasaranga’s spin, plus high-pressure chases and passionate fan atmospheres in both countries.
