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West Indies vs Sri Lanka | T20I Series 2026 | Sabina Park | June 14
West Indies won the 1st T20I by seven wickets, but the scoreline flattered them. After racing to 66/0 in the powerplay, Wanindu Hasaranga dismantled the middle order in two overs, reducing a routine chase into a scramble that required the final ball. The structural problem he exposed didn’t go away at the final whistle. Heading into the 2nd T20I at Sabina Park on June 14, it’s still there.
Sri Lanka were bowled out for 147/9, Kamindu Mendis top-scoring on 51 and Jason Holder taking 3/18. West Indies reached 66/0 inside six overs and should have chased 148 without drama.
Then Hasaranga arrived and dismissed King with a googly, then had Hetmyer caught off a wrist-spin variation after 17 off 10 balls. Chase crawled to 16 off 26 at a strike rate of 61.5. Hope’s unbeaten 65 off 54 papered over the damage, but West Indies needed the final over to win a chase they’d controlled entirely in the powerplay. Hasaranga bowled three overs, not four.
The middle order problem is not about individual quality. Hetmyer and Powell are among the most destructive T20 hitters in the game. The problem is what Hasaranga does to the structure when he strikes: two wickets and a paralysed partnership from a position of complete control.
| WI Batter | Position | 1st T20I Score | Overall T20I SR | Dismissed by Hasaranga |
| Brandon King | 1 | Dismissed early | 138.2 | Yes — googly, 1st T20I |
| Shai Hope | 2 | 65* (54 balls) | 121.4 | No |
| Shimron Hetmyer | 3 | 17 (10 balls) | 153.8 | Yes — wrist-spin variation |
| Roston Chase | 4 | 16 (26 balls) | 123.97 | No — stifled, SR 61.5 |
| Sherfane Rutherford | 5 | Did not bat | 157.3 | No |
| Rovman Powell | 6 | 10* (8 balls) | 165.1 | No |
Positions three through six contributed 43 runs total. Only Powell’s 10 off 8 came at a pressure-applying rate. The middle order didn’t lose the game; Hope won it, but they handed Sri Lanka the initiative and never fully reclaimed it.
Before this series, Hasaranga had 10 wickets in 4 T20I bowling innings in the Caribbean at an economy of 4.18. The 1st T20I added 2 more, taking his Caribbean T20I total to 12. His match economy of 10.67 was inflated by chase conditions; 4.18 from the previous four innings is the truer number.
His method is consistent: leg-break and googly at near-identical trajectories, exploiting the Caribbean tendency to commit early. King was deceived into the drive; Hetmyer pulled on the wrong delivery. Both wickets came to the variation, not the stock ball.
Roston Chase’s T20I career strike rate is 123.97 across 55 matches, a functional middle-order number. Against Hasaranga in the 1st T20I, he managed 16 off 26 at 61.5, not consolidation but stasis. He was never dismissed; he simply couldn’t score.
Chase couldn’t identify the variation until too late. An off-spinner reading seam trajectories faces a specific challenge against leg-breaks and googlies. Sri Lanka knows this: giving Hasaranga his full four overs and deploying him when Chase is at the crease isn’t a gamble, it’s the obvious instruction.
West Indies lead 1-0, and that comfort may blunt the urgency, which is exactly what Sri Lanka needs. The fix for West Indies isn’t complicated: give Chase a clear attacking brief, or promote a striker to absorb Hasaranga’s overs and push Chase lower. Hope’s method worked; it needs to be a plan, not a solo act.
Sri Lanka’s path: give Hasaranga his four overs, target Chase directly, and trust that the West Indies vs Sri Lanka T20I series 2026 middle order vulnerability repeats if left unaddressed. One game doesn’t fix a structural problem. Both sides know it.
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What happened in the West Indies vs Sri Lanka 1st T20I 2026?
West Indies beat Sri Lanka by seven wickets at Sabina Park on June 11, 2026, chasing 148 to finish 149/3 in 19.2 overs. Sri Lanka were bowled out for 147/9, with Kamindu Mendis scoring 51 and Jason Holder taking 3/18; Shai Hope anchored the chase with 65 off 54 balls.
What is Wanindu Hasaranga’s record in the West Indies?
Before the 2026 series, Hasaranga had taken 10 wickets in 4 T20I bowling innings in the Caribbean at an economy of 4.18. His 2/32 in the 1st T20I at Sabina Park brings his cumulative Caribbean T20I tally to 12 wickets.
Who is the best spinner in Sri Lanka’s T20I squad 2026?
Wanindu Hasaranga is Sri Lanka’s most dangerous spinner, with 16 wickets in the 2021 T20 World Cup, the most by any bowler in a single edition of the tournament. Maheesh Theekshana provides a complementary off-spin option, but Hasaranga remains the primary wicket-taking threat in the 2026 series.
Who won the West Indies vs Sri Lanka 1st T20I 2026?
West Indies won by seven wickets with four balls remaining at Sabina Park on June 11, 2026, taking a 1-0 lead in the three-match series. The 2nd T20I is scheduled for June 14, 2026, at the same venue.
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