Cricket Focus (11 July 1999)
How desperate can Sri Lankan off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan be to have his contract as Lancashire's overseas player extended
11-Jul-1999
11 July 1999
Cricket Focus
The Electronic Telegraph
Murali is now a frill seeker
How desperate can Sri Lankan off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan be to
have his contract as Lancashire's overseas player extended?
When Lancashire appealed for a volunteer to dress up in green
lederhosen, frilly shirt, knee socks and Tyrolean hat for a
photo-shoot on behalf of the German lager company who are sponsoring
their day-night matches in the CGU National League this season, only
one agreed.
Murali duly appeared in full William Tell gear on the front page of
the Manchester Evening News' sports section alongside a story in
which he proclaimed: "I am enjoying it here so much that I would like
to play again in 2000. It is up to Lancashire but I want to come
back."
Lancashire, meanwhile, are being strongly linked with Shane Warne,
apparently now available for around L120,000 a season.
So, if taking 37 wickets in three championship matches and getting
dressed up for the sponsors does not get the considerably cheaper
Murali the nod, there is an alternative. He can always borrow the
lederhosen again and audition for the Jagermeisters, the oompah band
which provided a surreal accompaniment to play during Lancashire's
floodlit game against Essex at Old Trafford last week.
David Smith is used to the sporting pressure cooker, having played
Test cricket for England at Sabina Park, Jamaica. He has experienced
nothing, however, like the occasion that awaits him today.
Smith, the former Surrey, Worcestershire and Sussex batsman, will
take to Silverstone for the race after the British Grand Prix in his
role as a driver in the GT Championship with Ian Jacobs Racing.
"To be part of the British Grand Prix meeting is awesome," said
Smith, whose Venturi car features, appropriately for an ex-cricketer,
the names Lara Croft and the striking character from the computer
game Tomb Raider. "Motor racing is just as big as cricket was for me
now. It's almost a full-time thing. Ultimately, I'd love to race at
Le Mans."
Vodafone have given everyone connected with the England squad a
complimentary mobile phone, but the sequential block of numbers that
goes with them has led to a few interesting wrong numbers.
When one caller pressed an incorrect digit, hoping to speak to
selector Mike Gatting, Kent's ample all-rounder Mark Ealham quipped:
"Sorry mate, right figure - wrong number."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)