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By
Oliver Brett
THIRD
ONE-DAY INTERNATIONAL, Dambulla:
England 164-8 beat Sri Lanka 164 by two wickets
Match reduced to 48 overs per side, England target 164
They
needed just 164 in 48 overs, but were reduced to 47-4 and 107-7
under the lights on an ultra-slow wicket.
However
spinner Graeme Swann, who had earlier taken 4-34, hit a brave
25, and with six wanted from nine balls Stuart Broad drove Lasith
Malinga for four.
He
clipped the next ball for two to secure victory with seven balls
left.
Broad
finished unbeaten on 20 to go with his 2-26 and was embraced by
Ryan Sidebottom after scoring the winning runs.
Earlier,
Swann excelled as Sri Lanka were bowled out for 164 in 41.1 overs,
despite a determined 70 from Tillakaratne Dilshan.
Swann's
final figures were the best by an England spinner since Michael
Vaughan took 4-22 against Sri Lanka at Old Trafford in 2002.
All
nine wickets to fall to bowlers were taken by Nottinghamshire
men, with a run-out completing the haul, while three early rain
delays meant England only had to match Sri Lanka's 164 to win
the match.

Maharoof has been a threat to England throughout
the series
Paul
Collingwood would not have been happy after losing the toss, given
how easily each side defended their totals batting first in the
previous matches.
But
England never allowed Sri Lanka to get away from them, and once
again Sidebottom's left-arm swing bowling was bang on target.
He took 3-19 in 8.1 overs.
Sidebottom
defeated Upul Tharanga's forward prod to bowl him through the
gate, then watched Swann dive to take a good catch at fine leg
to dismiss Sanath Jayasuriya.
Broad
tasted immediate success when his opening delivery was flogged
by Mahela Jayawardene straight to point.
And
the youngster grabbed another fortunate wicket in his next over
thanks to Kumar Sangakkara's noble gesture.
The
Sri Lankan number three gave Phil Mustard a faint edge, but neither
England's wicket-keeper nor Broad appealed for the catch.
However,
Sangakkara was already walking back to the pavilion, sportingly
giving himself out to leave the score 42-4 in the 15th over.
Swann,
never afraid to give the ball air and turn it as much as possible,
provided a cutting edge in the latter half of the innings.
Chamara
Silva was caught off his own boot as a sweep shot went wrong,
before two mesmerised batsmen gave Swann easy return catches.
Ravi
Bopara ran out Chaminda Vaas with some excellent work and Sri
Lanka were finally bowled out in the 42nd over.
Only
Dilshan managed to come to terms with the wicket, with a gutsy
innings featuring some confident pulls and drives. The next best
Sri Lankan score was Upul Tharanga's 15.
But
if England were hoping to ease to a comfortable victory, they
were in for a harsh reality check.
Alastair
Cook's woeful run continued when he nibbled at a ball from Vaas
he could easily have left and had to depart for a duck.
Mustard
hit two eye-catching boundaries but then dragged a short ball
from Farveez Maharoof (3-34) onto his stumps.
And
when Kevin Pietersen - who has made no impact at all on the series
- fell lbw to a big Maharoof inswinger the score was 44-3.
Ian
Bell looked in good form but when he got out, playing a risky
shot off Maharoof for Dilshan to take a stunning catch at point,
England were really up against it at 47-4.
A
painstaking stand worth 47 between Collingwood and Owais Shah
got the tourists back into the mix.
But
despite a required run rate of only 3.5 an over, Shah eventually
lost patience and was bowled, attempting a huge drive off spinner
Jayasuriya.
Jayasuriya
then made the critical breakthrough to remove Collingwood, and
it looked to be game over once Bopara fell lbw to a Malinga yorker.
But
there were to be some further twists in store.
Swann
and Broad conjured up a confident, phlegmatic partnership of 40
for the eighth wicket to put the pressure back on the Sri Lankan
fielders.
With
only 17 wanted, Dilhara Fernando found a perfect yorker to re-arrange
Swann's stumps.
But
Broad and Sidebottom had enough nous to get England past the winning-post,
with the match finishing at 11.24pm local time.
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