Pakistan 138 for 5 (Nawaz 38*, Talat 32*, Theekshana 2-24, Hasaranga 2-27) beat Sri Lanka 133 for 8 (Kamindu Mendis 50, Afridi 3-28, Talat 2-18, Rauf 2-37) by five wickets
An unbroken stand of 58 off 41 between
Hussain Talat and
Mohammad Nawaz saved Pakistan's blushes as they stumbled their way through a middling chase to eventually come away with a five-wicket win against Sri Lanka
in the Asia Cup in Abu Dhabi.
Having been set a target of 134, on a ground where the average winning total batting first was 183, Pakistan collapsed from 43 for 0 in five overs to 57 for 4 in the ninth over. Not long after it was 80 for 5 in the 12th over, but Talat and Nawaz got the job done for Pakistan without any further scares.
Talat finished on 32* off 30, while Nawaz struck 38* off 24, while for Sri Lanka the wickets were spread between Maheesh Theekshana, Wanindu Hasaranga and Dushmantha Chameera.
Talat had earlier made his initial impact with the ball, in a double-wicket over, removing both Charith Asalanka and Dasun Shanaka. It had followed a powerplay that saw Shaheen Shah Afridi pick up two wickets in the powerplay - he would end with three in total - as Sri Lanka lost their top three for the addition of 53 in the first six overs.
From that point on Pakistan strangled Sri Lanka's innings, as they only mustered 63 runs across the final ten overs.
Kamindu Mendis' 50 off 44 was the lone bright spot in an otherwise forgettable innings.
The result means that Sri Lanka have lost two games, and are now dependent on Bangladesh beating India to keep their hopes of making the final alive.
Afridi's early impact
Pakistan got the best of the bowling conditions when the won the toss and elected to bowl, but it still needed to be utilised. Both
Shaheen Shah Afridi and Faheem Ashraf found big movement early on, but that did not deter the Sri Lankan batters.
Kusal Mendis clipped one in the air to short midwicket first ball, but Pathum Nissanka and Kusal Perera both found the boundary. Afridi then accounted for Nissanka as well, with the opener edging behind an attempted heave down the ground - one he had executed efficiently just a ball prior.
Kusal Perera fell in the final over of the powerplay, miscuing one off Haris Rauf to mid-on. Sri Lanka had 53 runs in the powerplay, but Pakistan kept chipping away.
Talat sets up the middle-overs squeeze
Despite the loss of three wickets, Sri Lanka were still looking to attack - presumably reading that conditions were more than adequate for batting. However the two dismissals as a result of this approach, perhaps bordering on reckless at points, greatly reduced Sri Lanka's ability to post a competitive total.
The first was from Asalanka, who was batting well during his 19-ball 20, but ended up top-edging a short-arm pull to deep square leg. A ball later Dasun Shanaka nicked behind. Both those wickets came in Talat's first over, and he went onto finish with 2 for 18 in his three overs.
Sri Lanka's scoring slowed to a trickle after that point, as they scored just 34 runs between overs six and 16. During this period Abrar Ahmed trotted through four overs, giving away just eight runs while picking up the wicket of Wanindu Hasaranga.
Talat and Nawaz finish it off
Sahibzada Farhan and Fakhar Zaman seemingly broke the chase with a 45-run opening stand, but when Theekshana picked up both batters in the final over of the powerplay - the latter courtesy an outstanding one-handed grab at mid-off by Hasaranga - Sri Lanka felt they had a sniff.
Two Hasaranga overs later though and Pakistan had lost two more, and suddenly Sri Lanka were well and truly in it.
A 23-run stand between Talat and Mohammad Haris briefly brought back some control of proceedings for Pakistan, but when Chameera burst one through Haris to peg back the middle stump, Pakistan still needed 54 more with half their side back in the dugout.
Thankfully for them, Talat and Nawaz navigated the chase shrewdly, taking minimal risks to take the game deep. It was only in the death overs that they opened up, with Nawaz looking to take on Hasaranga and then finally Chameera. A trio of sixes off the latter brought the game to a rapid close.