Ben Stokes hit a gutsy unbeaten 42 as England made the T20 World Cup semi-finals on Saturday with a tense four-wicket win over Sri Lanka.
It ended the hopes of defending champions Australia.
England needed to win to make the last four from Group 1 alongside already qualified New Zealand, and they achieved the feat with two balls to spare.
If they had lost, Australia would have gone through.
Sri Lanka looked on track for a big total when they reached 80-2 after 10 overs, but the aggressive Pathum Nissanka was out for 67 and they crumbled to 141-8 with Mark Wood taking 3-26.
England raced to 75-0 in reply and looked on track for an easy win. But they collapsed to 111-5 under pressure from the Sri Lanka spin attack and it went to the wire.
The victory was not enough to dethrone New Zealand at the top of the table with England settling for second. The fate of Group 1 will be determined on Sunday.
Sri Lanka’s defeat ended Australia’s stuttering tournament, with their title defence never recovering after losing heavily to New Zealand on the opening day then having to share the points with England due to rain.
How they finished in Group 1 of the #T20WorldCup pic.twitter.com/XhHTRrT7OK
— SA Cricket magazine (@SACricketmag) November 5, 2022
Sri Lanka, who have not beaten England in a T20I since 2014, won the toss and asked England to field, conscious that all five previous games at the ground during the World Cup had been won by the team batting first.
Nissanka pulled Stokes for an authoritative six off the second ball and two more sixes in the third over, off Wood, signalled their intent.
But an aggressive 39-run opening stand ended when Kusal Mendis (18) attempted another boundary from Chris Woakes and Liam Livingstone held a catch near the ropes.
Nissanka kept the runs flowing but his new partner Dhananjaya de Silva (nine) slogged at a slower Sam Curran ball and was caught by Stokes in the deep.
They reached 80-2 at the halfway point, but then Livingstone took a simple catch to remove Charith Asalanka (eight).
Nissanka brought up his second fifty of the tournament and ninth overall, then crunched Stokes for six to pass 1,000 T20I career runs.
But tight bowling from spinner Adil Rashid slowed the run rate and he eventually accounted for Nissanka, who heaved to substitute fielder Chris Jordan at long on after a 45-ball knock.
Sri Lanka never regained momentum, making just 25 off the last five overs with three wickets falling in the final over.
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In reply, Alex Hales and Jos Buttler plundered 70 off the six-over powerplay, smashing 11 boundaries in the process.
Sri Lanka gave themselves hope when Buttler (28) and Hales (47) were out in the space of three overs, with the spin of Wanindu Hasaranga accounting for both of them.
Harry Brook (four) quickly followed, caught and bowled by De Silva, then Livingstone (four) carelessly threw his wicket away with a slog and Moeen Ali (one) soon joined them back in the pavillion.
But Stokes kept his cool as the wickets tumbled and steered his side into the semi-finals alongside Woakes.
© Agence France-Presse