Pakistan 118 for 4 (Babar 37*, Ayub 36, Rathnayake 2-11) beat Sri Lanka 114 (Mishara 59, Nawaz 3-17, Shaheen 3-18, Abrar 2-18) by six wickets
Pakistan thundered to victory in the final of the tri-series, their attack blazing through the last nine
Sri Lanka wickets for 30 runs, before their batters carried them without major drama to a target of 115. The victory came in the 19th over.
Earlier, it had been three-wicket hauls for
Shaheen Shah Afridi and
Mohammad Nawaz, and two wickets for
Abrar Ahmed, that had seen Pakistan produce the definitive passage of the game - the second half of Sri Lanka's innings.
Sri Lanka had been 84 for 1 in the 11th over when Nawaz had Kusal Mendis caught athletically by
Babar Azam, on the boundary. They would nosedive spectacularly from there, losing wickets to spin mainly, but pace too, until they were all out for 114 in 19.1 overs.
The chase was low-tempo, but mostly smooth. Openers
Sahibzada Farhan and
Saim Ayub put on 46 together. Babar then produced a steady 37 not out to guide the team home in plenty of time. They never hit a high gear. But they didn't need to.
How do you go from a 64-run second-wicket partnership to 114 all out? Let Sri Lanka show you how.
The spinners drove the collapse. After Nawaz dismissed Mendis, Abrar and Ayub ran riot, Abrar having Kusal Perera and Pavan Rathnayake caught attempting big shots within three balls of each other. Ayub had Sri Lanka's top-scorer
Kamil Mishara caught, before Nawaz came back to rattle the stumps of Janith Liyanage and Wanindu Hasaranga.
To give you an idea of how quickly wickets were falling, Sri Lanka had seven consecutive partnerships worth six runs or fewer.
A score of 37 not out off 34 isn't exactly stellar T20I material, but in the context of having to guide the team to a low target, Babar's innings was sensibly-paced. It may not deter his critics exactly, but it might hold them off.
In a stretch in which Babar has been suggesting that the best version of himself might be back, it was also significant that he had such a good outing in the field in this match. The catch to dismiss Mendis was a nicely-judged overhead take, balancing to keep himself inside the boundary. The catch to dismiss Mishara was taken on the run, coming in from the straight boundary, diving forward. To get Rathnayake, he leapt up inside the circle to hold the catch with outstretched fingers.
Mishara sets a foundation
Although Sri Lanka would fail spectacularly to build on it, their young opener Mishara had set a launching pad with his 59 off 47 balls. He had a powerful aerial game inside the powerplay, his three sixes in that phase coming in the arc between long off and deep midwicket. After the field went back, he settled into a rhythm of singles. With this being his second successive half-century, Sri Lanka are likely to persist with him.