[caption id="attachment_22191" align="alignnone" width="580"]Dilshan Tilakaratne Dilshan acknowledging the crowd at Premadasa stadium . Image Source: twitter[/caption] Internet Desk: Tillakaratne Dilshan's illustrious international career ended on a losing note as Australia beat Sri Lanka by four wickets in Colombo, despite a dramatic late collapse, to complete a 2-0 series victory. In his 497th and final appearance for his country, the flamboyant Dilshan was only able to contribute a solitary run as the hosts were duly restricted to 128-9, with only Dhananjaya de Silva (62) and Kusal Perera (22) reaching double figures. Adam Zampa (3-16), James Faulkner (3-19) and John Hastings (2-23) impressed for Australia, who looked set to romp to victory when Glenn Maxwell (66 off 29 balls) dominated an opening stand of 93 with David Warner. However, Maxwell's departure triggered an unexpected collapse on a pitch offering plentiful turn and Dilshan delighted the crowd by claiming 2-8 - including a wicket with what proved his final delivery - before a maximum from Travis Head eventually got the tourists home with 13 balls unused. Australia will therefore head home having won both limited-overs rubbers following their humbling 3-0 Test series defeat. While his final appearance did not go to plan prior to his late success with the ball, Dilshan was understandably lauded by Sri Lanka's fans before, during and after Friday's match. One of only 11 players to have scored hundreds in all three formats, he boasts 17,671 international runs and is also his nation's record run-scorer in T20s. ICC chief executive David Richardson hailed Dilshan's contribution to Sri Lankan cricket. In a statement, Richardson said of the 39-year-old: "He will be remembered for his innovative strokes and as a destructive opener. He was also a useful spin bowler and an outstanding fielder. We congratulate Dilshan for a fine career and wish him every success in the future." Dilshan, who retired from Test cricket in 2013, topped the ICC World Twenty20 rankings for T20 Batsmen in June 2009 and the ODI all-rounders’ list in 2015. He was selected in the ICC’s ODI team of the year four times – in 2009, 2011, 2013 and 2015, and won the 2009 Twenty20 International Performance of the Year for his 96 off 57 balls against the West Indies in the semifinal of the ICC World Twenty20 in 2009. Dilshan was a member of the Sri Lanka side which shared the ICC Champions Trophy 2002 title with India, and won the ICC World Twenty20 2014 in Bangladesh. He also featured in the finals of the ICC Cricket World Cups in 2007 and 2011. He scored 5,492 runs in 87 Test matches with 16 centuries and plundered 10,290 runs in 330 ODIs with 22 centuries. In T20Is, he got 1889 runs in 80 matches including one century, which makes him one of only 11 batsmen to have scored centuries in all three formats in international cricket.