
England captain Harry Brook has identified in-form opener Pathum Nissanka as a key wicket as England prepare to begin their Super Eight campaign against Sri Lanka national cricket team today at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium.
Nissanka has been one of the standout batters of the tournament and currently sits among the leading run scorers. A brilliant century followed by a fluent half century in his last two outings has placed him at the centre of Sri Lanka’s batting plans, making him a major threat at the top of the order.
Brook acknowledged the danger posed by the Sri Lankan opener and stressed the importance of striking early.
“Nissanka is on a bit of a hot streak at the moment, so it would be ideal if we can get him out early,” Brook said at the pre-match press conference. “But we just want to go out there and play our best cricket and look to put them under pressure as much as possible throughout.”
England arrive at the Super Eight stage with confidence after sweeping Sri Lanka 3-0 in a recent bilateral series at the same venue. Brook believes those matches have given his side valuable knowledge of the conditions.

“We obviously had a very good series against them here and on this particular ground as well, so we can take some experience from that three-match series and hopefully use that in the game starting tomorrow,” he said.
“They are obviously a strong side with a lot of confidence after a few very good wins and if we stick to our guns and play our best cricket there’s no reason why we can’t beat them.”
Familiarity with the surface at Pallekele could also prove crucial. England have already played several matches at the ground and Brook feels that experience could be an advantage.
“Yeah, I think so. We obviously played three at this ground and we’ve got another two coming up, so we can take those experiences and a lot of confidence from playing here and understanding the surface,” he explained. “We’re looking forward to the crowd as well.”
Weather, however, could play a significant role in the contest with forecasts suggesting heavy rain in the region. Brook insisted England would prepare for a full match rather than speculate about a shortened encounter.
“I think you just have to prepare as if it is a T20,” he said. “Sometimes you can go down a rabbit hole thinking it might be a five-over game and then it ends up being a full T20. If the rain comes, we’ll just have to adapt.”
With Sri Lanka riding on Nissanka’s form and England banking on experience at Pallekele, the opening exchanges could set the tone for what promises to be a pivotal Super Eight contest.




