Sri Lanka earned only its fourth Test victory on English soil after an unbeaten century by opener Pathum Nissanka helped secure an eight-wicket win in the third and final match of the series against England at The Oval.
England won the series 2-1 but missed out on a second clean sweep of its international summer, having defeated the West Indies 3-0 in July.
Starting day four on 1-94 and requiring 125 more runs to win, the Sri Lankans needed barely two hours to complete the job in clinical fashion.
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The platform was built on Sunday when they skittled England for 156 in just 34 overs and were given a victory target of 219.
Nissanka underpinned the chase with his second Test hundred, reaching three figures in 107 balls and finishing 127 not out as Sri Lanka got to 219 in 40.3 overs.
The diminutive opener, who struck 13 fours and two sixes, spread his arms wide and soaked in the applause inside a half-full ground after passing 100, then kissed his bat and looked to the sky.
His other century was against the West Indies in 2021, his first year in the Sri Lankan test team.
The quality of his knock raised the question why he didn’t start the first Test against England at Old Trafford last month, before he was recalled for the second test at Lord’s.
Fittingly, it was Nissanka who scored the clinching runs with a cut for four.
The tourists’ previous Test wins in England came in 1998 – that famous 10-wicket victory in a one-off test at The Oval – as well as at Trent Bridge in 2006 and Headingley in 2014.
This latest one looked unlikely after they won the toss but couldn’t capitalize on perfect bowling conditions on day one, which England ended on 3-221. It was all Sri Lanka after that, however, as England got sloppy and occasionally reckless.
The only wicket to fall on Monday was that of Kusal Mendis (39), who pulled a delivery from Gus Atkinson and saw Shoaib Bashir take a diving catch in the deep.
Angelo Mathews was unbeaten on 32 alongside Nissanka at the end, with the pair putting on 111 runs in an unbroken stand for the third wicket.
Post-game, Sri Lanka captain Dhananjaya de Silva said “this is one of the happiest moments of my career in my life”.
Opposing captain Ollie Pope denied complacency played a role in England’s performance.
“I don’t think it was complacency at all, it has been a long summer but that’s nothing to do with the fact we lost this game,” he said.
“We still came out with the same intentions, wanted to play in a similar way but this game for some reason just didn’t quite come off.”
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