Sugandika Kumari reached the 150-international-cap milestone emphatically on 26 June 2026, delivering a composed cameo with the bat and a tidy spell with the ball as Sri Lanka edged Scotland by three wickets at Emirates Old Trafford in Match 25 of the ICC Women's T20 World Cup. The left-arm spinner's experience under pressure proved decisive in a game that underscored why teams keep trusted veterans in their ranks through multiple tournaments.
Kumari's landmark came in Sri Lanka's fifth match of the campaign as Chamari Athapaththu's side got over the line in a tense run chase after bowling first.
The 34-year-old sent down a disciplined three-over spell, returning figures of 3-0-25-1, and accounted for Scotland's in-form Darcey Carter (34 off 36) , the tournament's leading run-scorer with 208 runs at a strike rate of 111.82 and an average of 52 in five innings, including two half-centuries. Her wicket prevented Scotland from accelerating further, as they posted a competitive 151 for 6 from their 20 overs, setting up a tense finish.
The run chase boiled down to a dramatic last over, with Sri Lanka needing seven runs and Scotland turning to Rachel Slater.
Fate, however, intervened: Slater suffered a knee issue mid-over and was forced off the field with Sri Lanka three runs shy of three balls. Into that moment stepped Kumari, calm and composed as ever. She remained unbeaten on 7 off 5 balls, found a gap as the field closed, and lashed the ball to the boundary to seal a ball-to-spare victory. Crucially, it marked Sri Lanka's third win in a single edition of the ICC Women's T20 World Cup, a historic achievement. The result leaves Sri Lanka's semi-final hopes hinging on Ireland upsetting the West Indies in Bristol.
Kumari's milestone is the product of more than a decade of consistent service.
She debuted internationally on 11 January 2015 against Pakistan at Sharjah, and in T20Is on 15 January 2015, and has since become a workhorse for Sri Lanka across formats. In ODIs, she has collected 45 wickets from 49 innings at an average of 38.53 and an economy of 5.04 across 51 matches, while contributing 229 runs in 37 innings. In T20Is, she sits among Sri Lanka's leading wicket-takers with 73 wickets from 98 innings (99 matches) at an average of 27.76 and an economy of 6.18, along with 108 runs in 35 innings.
Overall, she is the fifth-highest wicket-taker for Sri Lanka in T20Is, a testament to durability and effectiveness over many campaigns.
This is Kumari's sixth ICC Women's T20 World Cup campaign since her tournament debut in 2016. Across World Cups, she has taken 14 wickets in 22 matches at an average of 36.14 and an economy of 7.24. In the ongoing edition, she has added three wickets in five matches, with an average of 46 and an economy of 8.62. Friday's performance offered a reminder that raw numbers do not capture the full value of a seasoned campaigner: the right intervention at the right time, and the nerve to close out a tight chase.
At 34, Sugandika Kumari remains an embodiment of resilience for Sri Lanka, not only a spinner who builds pressure and picks crucial wickets but also a lower-order bat who can guide her side over the line.
Her 150th appearance was more than a personal landmark; it was a pivotal, match-winning contribution that kept Sri Lanka very much alive in the tournament and underscored the quiet, match-defining influence of experience.