Sri Lanka’s late-order batsmen held their nerve to beat Pakistan by two wickets and level the series in a match in which fortunes swung from one side to another in Dubai on Friday.
Set 285 to chase, Sri Lanka needed 16 off the last two overs and four off the final, as No. 10 batsman Sachitra Senanayake drove Shahid Afridi for boundary to seal a tense win for his team with two deliveries to spare.
The win levelled the five-match series at 1-1 after Pakistan won the first match by 11 runs in Sharjah on Wednesday. Ahmed Shehzad smashed a career best 124 off 140 deliveries for his fourth one-day century as Pakistan posted a challenging 284-4 in 50 overs after being sent in to bat.
Photo: AFP
Sri Lanka needed 44 off the last six overs as Angelo Mathews (47) and Dimuth Karunaratne (16 not out) held their nerves during a match-turning 44-run stand for the eighth wicket.
Sri Lanka had set themselves up nicely at 159-2 with Kumar Sangakkara (58) and Dinesh Chandimal (44) before Mathews took over.
When on 29, Sangakkara completed 12,000 one-day runs in his 359th match. He is the fourth batsmen to score 12,000 or more runs in the format, with the leader being Sachin Tendulkar (18,426 in 463 matches).
Sangakkara reached his 82nd half-century off 54 deliveries, but eight runs later played Ajmal onto his stumps. In all he hit four boundaries and a six.
Sri Lanka were off to a swift 48-run start by Tillakaratne Dilshan (40) and Kusal Perera (16) before they were run out to leave Sri Lanka 65-2.
With the ball hard to grip for the spinners as dew fell, Sangakkara and Chandimal added 94 for the third wicket.
Nuwan Kulasekara chipped in with 32, including two sixes and three fours to up the scoring in the final overs.
Mathews praised his team’s effort and fightback.
“It was a complete team effort,” Mathews said. “Pakistan were cruising along and were due for another big score, but we kept them to 284 and then held our nerve.”
Pakistan captain Misbah-ul Haq said: “We gave away many runs in the final overs and we need to improve our death bowling if we want to win the series.”
Earlier, Shehzad steadied Pakistan’s innings during a 76-run second wicket stand with Mohammad Hafeez (32).
Shehzad also added another 105 runs for the fourth wicket with skipper Misbah (59 not out).
Shehzad took a single off Malinga to reach his hundred, which came off 121 deliveries with the help of six boundaries. He was trapped LBW by Kulasekara in the 46th over.
Misbah kept the charge going alongside Shahid Afridi (30 not out) as Pakistan scored 92 in the last 10 overs.
Misbah hit two fours and a six in his 34th one-day half-century while Afridi hit two sixes and a boundary.
The Sri Lankan bowlers, who conceded 322 in the first game in Sharjah, kept a tight line and length, but were hurt because of injuries to skipper Mathews and Thisara Perera who could not complete their overs.
The remaining matches are to be played in Sharjah today and in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday and Friday.
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