Muralitharan looks ahead to brighter occasions (3 June 1999)
Things could certainly improve for Muttiah Muralitharan, the Sri Lankan off-spinner
03-Jun-1999
3 June 1999
Muralitharan looks ahead to brighter occasions
Christopher Lyles
Things could certainly improve for Muttiah Muralitharan, the Sri
Lankan off-spinner. Following his country's dismal efforts to hang on
to the World Cup, he had to sit around and twiddle his thumbs at a
saturated Bristol yesterday when the first day of Lancashire's
championship match against Gloucestershire was washed out by
overnight rain. Welcome to county cricket, Murali.
But Sri Lanka's early exit from the 'Carnival of Cricket' is very
much to the benefit of Lancashire, who have signed the 27-year-old as
their overseas player on a one-year contract, in preference to Wasim
Akram, last season's captain. Great deeds are expected of the Kandy
man, who returned 16 for 220, the fifth best bowling analysis in Test
cricket, when Sri Lanka conquered England at the Oval last August - a
match in which he took his 200th wicket in only his 42nd Test.
The talents of this affable Tamil, who was born with a deformity in
his right elbow joint, are unique. Together with an ability to
manoeuvre his wrist almost as if it were made of rubber, his capacity
to spin and dip the ball is prodigious.
But controversy has never been far away since he was no-balled for
throwing by Darrell Hair in the Melbourne Test of 1995-96. Murali's
action was later cleared by the International Cricket Council, only
for another Australian umpire, Ross Emerson, to reopen old wounds
last winter by calling him against England in a World Series match.
"The weather is certainly most disappointing," Muralitharan said
yesterday, as he became acquainted with his new team-mates. "And I'm
so disappointed about the World Cup. But it can't be helped.
Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. It is difficult to say where
it went wrong because, altogether, we did not play well."
He is greatly looking forward to his season with Lancashire, and he
is probably relishing the fact that it should afford him some time
out of the spotlight.
"It's a first season for me playing county cricket and I just want to
enjoy it. I haven't set myself any targets, but I simply want to take
as many wickets as possible for Lancashire."
English pitches are hardly a spinner's delight, but that does not
seem to bother Murali. As well as his ability to spin and dip the
ball, he can elicit surprising bounce, in addition to a top-spinner
and a quicker ball.
"I have the ability to turn the ball and I think I will do well," he
said with absolute modesty. In fact, he may do well enough to help
bring a first outright championship to Lancashire since 1934.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph