Muralitharan undergoes successful operation in Australia (17 February 1999)
Muthiah Muralitharan would have been confronted with a bowling problem in Test matches had he not undergone surgery in his right arm
17-Feb-1999
17 February 1999
Muralitharan undergoes successful operation in Australia
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
Muthiah Muralitharan would have been confronted with a bowling
problem in Test matches had he not undergone surgery in his right
arm.
The Sri Lankan ace spin bowler was operated just above the shoulder
joint by an Australian surgeon at Victoria House, a private hospital
in Melbourne recently.
Muralitharan suffered damaged cartilege as a result of a fall he had
while fielding in Sharjah last December. Although he continued to
bowl after that, his arm was getting stiff and painful.
Muralitharan underwent arthroscopic surgery on the injury which
resulted in the removal of the damaged cartilege and a small piece of
his collar bone, which would now give him a little bit more space to
rotate his arm freely.
"The surgeon who operated on Murali said that he should be bowling
between six to eight weeks," said Sri Lanka team physio Alex
Kountouri.
Explaining Muralitharan's injury Kountouri said: "After bowling about
10 overs, Murali's arm would be very stiff the next day. He wasn't
able to push his arm quick enough and bowl faster as he liked. In a
Test match he would really have a problem bowling 25 to 30 overs,"
said Kountouri.
In his seven years of international cricket, Muralitharan has become
Sri Lanka's lynchpin, bearing the brunt of the bowling and taking
over a century of wickets in both forms of the game.
Muralitharan was operated by the same surgeon who attended to Sanath
Jayasuriya's broken right elbow bone.
Jayasuriya had a metal plate screwed on to hold his hand together
after it was damaged in the World Series Cup game against Australia
at Perth. The presence of a metal plate means Jayasuriya doesn't need
any plaster on his hand.
"If you seem him now he looks normal because he doesn't have a
plaster on. He is recovering quickly and has already started
exercising his arm. The surgeon says he can start batting in about
four weeks," said Kountouri.
The Sri Lankan physio said that it was optional for Jayasuriya to
have the metal removed after he recovers. But it should be removed
only after 12 months.
Both players who form an integral part of the national team will be
sorely missed in the inaugural Asian Test championships where Sri
Lanka meet India at the SSC on February 24 and Pakistan at Lahore on
March
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)