ঢাকা, শনিবার, ১৮ জুলাই, ২০২৬, ৩ শ্রাবণ ১৪৩৩
লাইভ
Sri Lanka U19২৫৭/০
India U19
Day 3: Rain stops play - India U19 ১৬৭ রানে পিছিয়ে
West Indies১৩৮/১০
New Zealand১৪১/৫
New Zealand ৫ উইকেটে জয়ী
Ireland Women২৪১/৭
West Indies Women২৪২/৪
West Indies Women ৬ উইকেটে জয়ী
সব ম্যাচ →
ফুটবল
এই মুহূর্তে কোনো ম্যাচের তথ্য নেই
সব ম্যাচ →
← All Venues
R. Premadasa Stadium

R. Premadasa Stadium

Colombo, Sri Lanka
Facts
LocationColombo
CountrySri Lanka
Coordinates6°56′23″N 79°52′19″E / 6.93972°N 79.87194°E / 6.93972; 79.87194
Establishment1986
Capacity35, 000
OwnerSri Lanka Cricket
OperatorSri Lanka Cricket
First men's Test28 August – 2 September 1992:, Sri Lanka v Australia
Last men's Test14–18 July 2017:, Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe
First men's ODI5 April 1986:, Sri Lanka v New Zealand
Last men's ODI27 January 2026:, Sri Lanka v England
First men's T20I10 February 2009:, Sri Lanka v India
Last men's T20I11 February 2026:, Australia v Ireland
First women's ODI29 March 1999:, Sri Lanka v Netherlands
Last women's ODI11 May 2025:, Sri Lanka v India
First women's T20I4 October 2012:, England v New Zealand
Last women's T20I26 May 2015:, Sri Lanka v West Indies
Sri Lanka national cricket team(1986–present)
The R. Premadasa Cricket Stadium (RPS) (Sinhala: ආර්. ප්‍රේමදාස ක්‍රීඩාංගනය, Tamil: ஆர். பிரேமதாச அரங்கம்; formerly known as Khettarama Stadium) is a cricket stadium on Khettarama Road, in the Maligawatta suburb of Colombo, Sri Lanka. The stadium was, before June 1994, known as the Khettarama Cricket Stadium and is today one of the main venues where the Sri Lankan cricket team play, having hosted more than 150 one-day international matches. It is the largest stadium in Sri Lanka with a capacity of 35, 000 spectators. It has hosted the 2012 ICC World Twenty20 final between Sri Lanka and West Indies; the 2002 ICC Champions Trophy final between Sri Lanka and India and first semi-final of the 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup between Sri Lanka and New Zealand. This was where the highest Test score in history was recorded; 952 by Sri Lanka against India. With capacity exceeding Lord's in England, the stadium is known as the "Home of Sri Lankan Cricket".

Source: Wikipedia