Dambulla Stadium | |
![]() During match between Sri Lanka and Pakistan ODI on 30 August 2014 | |
Ground information | |
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Location | Dambulla, Central Province |
Coordinates | 7°51′34″N 80°38′02″E / 7.85944°N 80.63389°E |
Establishment | 2000 |
Capacity | 16,800 |
Owner | Sri Lanka Cricket |
Operator | Sri Lanka Cricket |
Tenants |
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End names | |
Press Box End Scoreboard End | |
International information | |
First ODI | 23 March 2001:![]() ![]() |
Last ODI | 13 October 2018:![]() ![]() |
First T20I | 17 February 2024:![]() ![]() |
Last T20I | 21 February 2024:![]() ![]() |
First WODI | 2 May 2008:![]() ![]() |
Last WODI | 24 March 2018:![]() ![]() |
First WT20I | 23 June 2022:![]() ![]() |
Last WT20I | 24 July 2024:![]() ![]() |
As of 24 July 2024 Source: Cricinfo CricketArchive |
Rangiri Dambulla International Cricket Stadium (Sinhala: රංගිරි දඹුලු ජාත්යන්තර ක්රීඩාංගනය, Tamil: தம்புள்ள சர்வதேச கிரிக்கெட் விளையாட்டு மைதானம்) is a 16,800-seat[1] cricket stadium in Sri Lanka. It is situated in the Central Province, close to Dambulla on a 60-acre (240,000 m2) site leased from the Rangiri Dambulla Temple. it is the first and only International cricket ground in the dry zone of Sri Lanka. The stadium is built overlooking the Dambulla Tank (reservoir) and the Dambulla Rock.