Muttiah Muralitharan, the former Sri Lankan spinner who is working
with the Australian team as a spin consultant ahead of the three-Test
series in Sri Lanka, and Charith Senanayake, the Sri Lankan team
manager, were allegedly involved in a verbal altercation, following
which Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) lodged a complaint with Cricket Australia
(CA) on Monday (July 25).
It is alleged that Muralitharan tried to
influence the pitch preparations and asked for a spin-friendly track
for the warm-up clash at the P Sara Oval. The Australians cantered to a
massive win by an innings and 62 runs against the Sri Lankans, with
Steve O'Keefe, the 31-year-old left-arm spinner, ending with match
figures of 10 for 64.
The former Sri Lankan spinner confronted
Senanayake and rubbished the allegations. "Charith has accused [me] and
told the media that I have cut the grass on the pitch to help
Australia's spin bowlers to take the wickets in the three-day game.
That's a lie," Murali said. "When I met him I asked him: 'We played
together and respected each other, why are you telling lies?', he told
me that they have just made an inquiry.
"The Tamil Union wicket
was made at the time by Janaka Sampath, who is the SLC board curator.
They should clarify from him what actually happened, rather than going
on rumour."
Muralitharan was also left unimpressed after the
Australian team was not allowed to carry out fielding drills inside the
venue ahead of the first Test. Murali allegedly stormed into the venue
and SLC accused him of conducting training on the centre wicket without
taking prior permission.
Thilanga Sumathipala, the SLC president,
confirmed that the board had lodged a complaint with the visiting team
for the violation. "There are two problems here," Sumathipala said. "The
first is that Charith Senanayake has made a complaint that he had been
berated. The second is that a certain training session for the Australia
players at Pallekele had been carried out without permission."
Sumathipala
also cried foul over the prospects of Muralitharan's association with
Australia helping the visitors perform better, and stated that the home
board was 'very hurt' by the alliance.
"We're very disappointed
because Murali is a player the board spent a lot of effort saving," he
said. "We saved him three times. From a professional standpoint, there
is no problem with him working with the Australian team. But the issue
here is an ethical one. We've named the trophy the Murali-Warne trophy.
"And
I remember once when we went to Kandy with Murali, he was on a truck
and there was so much support for him that it took four hours for him to
get home. Kandy is his hometown, and he's now had to coach an
opposition team at Pallekele. Regardless of professionalism, we're very
hurt by this."
Muralitharan has had several run-ins with Australia
and endured a stormy relationship with them throughout his career over
chucking allegations. However, the two have now buried the hatchet and
found a way to work together. Muralitharan took a thin-veiled dig at Sri
Lanka Cricket for having a problem with it.
"I know in '95 and
'96 I had problems against Australia, and the whole of Sri Lanka backed
me," Muralitharan said. "I thought that when Australia asked me to
coach, that's them saying that I didn't do anything wrong - that I am
correct and they were wrong at the time. That's them proving it by
asking me to train their spinners.
"Does SLC think that just
because I coach Australia for 10 days, Australia will win? If that's the
case I am the best coach in the world, and Sri Lanka should hire me
every time, and we will win every time."
"These people who are
accusing me should go and look in the mirror [and compare] what they are
doing to the country and what I am doing," he pointed out. "The other
fundamental wrong is that when our players become brilliant coaches, the
board chases them off. I'm talking about Chandika Hathurusingha,
Chaminda Vaas, Marvan Atapattu, Mario Villavarayan, and Thilan
Samaraweera, who went to Australia. These people are all working in
different countries where they are valued more than [they are] here.
"What
we do is bring all the top coaches from abroad when we [already] have
the talent. We are not using it. Am I the traitor or are they the
traitors? When they pay also - the foreign coaches are paid so much more
than the Sri Lankan coaches."
Muralitharan's appointment by
Cricket Australia stems from their quest to leave no stones unturned to
be well-prepared for unfamiliar conditions in the sub-continent and
improve their record there. Before Muralitharan, the visitors had hired
Thilan Samaraweera, another former Sri Lankan, to work with some of the
Australian batsmen at Australia's National Cricket Centre in Brisbane
ahead of the tour.
The first Test begins on Tuesday (July 26) in Pallekele.

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