Australia’s T20 World Cup 2026 journey concluded in the group stage after the Zimbabwe-Ireland match in Pallekele was abandoned due to persistent rain, without a ball bowled.
Zimbabwe picked up a shared point to reach five points from three matches, securing Super 8 qualification ahead of Group B leaders Sri Lanka.
Australia, with two points from two games, faced mathematical elimination even before their final fixture against Oman.
The Baggy Greens started strongly, beating Ireland by 67 runs in their opener. Travis Head and skipper Mitchell Marsh laid a solid platform, but losses to Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka derailed their campaign.
Against Zimbabwe at R. Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, Australia crumbled to 146 all out in 19.3 overs while chasing 170.
Blessing Muzarabani and Brad Evans stood strong for their country, as openers faltered and only Matt Renshaw (65 off 44) offered resistance alongside Glenn Maxwell (31 off 32).
Sri Lanka inflicted further damage three days later, chasing Australia’s 181 all out in 20 overs with 184 for 2 in 18 overs at Pallekele.
Head fell early (caught off Dushmantha Chameera), but Marsh scored a fifty before the middle order collapsed.
Pavan Rathnayake and others powered Sri Lanka home, with Adam Zampa unable to stem the flow.
After the match, the captain noted: “I think it was probably just execution tonight. That full-strength batting lineup has some of the best players of spin in Australia. It was more about execution.
Sri Lanka pulled it back beautifully. We were probably a few short after the start. We had great belief going into the second innings, but we were outplayed.”
Group B standings sealed Australia’s fate: Sri Lanka topped with four points from two wins, Zimbabwe advanced on four (rising to five post-washout), Australia sat third on two, Ireland on two, and Oman pointless. Even a win over Oman would cap Australia at four points, short of Zimbabwe’s total.
Zimbabwe’s giant-killing act, led by Brian Bennett’s 64 not out versus Australia, earned praise as a tournament highlight.
They join Sri Lanka in Super 8 Group 1, facing India, South Africa, and West Indies. The tournament, hosted across India and Sri Lanka from February 7 to March 8, rolls on with knockouts looming.
This marks only the second group-stage exit for Australia in T20 World Cup history, after their 2009 outing. Attention now turns to bilateral series and the 2027 ODI World Cup prep.
