Murali confident that his doosra is legal
Muttiah Muralitharan has vowed to prove that his bowling action, including his controversial doosra, is legal during the coming six weeks
Wisden Staff
30-Mar-2004
Muttiah Muralitharan has vowed to prove that his bowling action,
including his controversial doosra, is legal during the coming six
weeks. Muralitharan was plunged into a fresh throwing controversy after being
reported by International Cricket Council match referee Chris Broad on
Sunday.
"I am very disappointed by what has happened as I thought this matter
was behind me," Muralitharan told reporters on Monday. "I have been bowling
this delivery for over five years now and I am naturally upset because I feel
there is nothing wrong with it."
Muralitharan's action will be assessed as soon as possible by an
ICC-approved 'human movement specialist', who will be appointed shortly.
Muralitharan, who will still be able to play during the six-week
assessment period, is hopeful that the fourth set of rigorous scientific tests on his action in his career will finally put an end to the controversy: "I am
very confident that these assessments will prove, once and for all, that my
bowling action is perfectly legal."
Muralitharan's bowling action was first assessed by the University of
Western Australia in 1996 using six cameras shooting at a thousand frames
per second. They concluded that his unique bent-arm action created the
optical illusion of chucking.
Further voluntary research was carried out by the University of Hong Kong the same year and in England in 1999 after being called during Sri Lanka's tour to Australia in 1998/99.