新浪首页 > 新浪教育 > Sri Lanka puts gag on Murali

Sri Lanka puts gag on Murali
http://www.sina.com.cn 2004/11/18 15:50  Shanghai Daily

  Muttiah Muralitharan has been publicly rebuked by the Sri Lanka cricket board after questioning the bowling action of Australia's leading pace bowlers.

  Muralitharan stirred up controversy when he said during an interview with Melbourne's Radio Sport 927 that Jason Gillespie, Glenn McGrath and Brett Lee flexed their arms by 12, 13 and 14-15 degrees, respectively.

  At present, spinners are permitted five degrees of bend, medium pacers 7.5 and fast bowlers 10, although last week an ICC committee recommended all bowlers be allowed to straighten their arms by up to 15 degrees.

  Sri Lanka Cricket has demanded an explanation from leading off spinner Muralitharan and insisted that he seek their prior permission before agreeing to any more media interviews.

  "Sri Lanka Cricket was perturbed by statements attributed to Mr Muralitharan in the recent past," a media statement read.

  "Mr Muralitharan is a contracted player and making statements to the media without having obtained the requisite permission is a violation of the said contract," it added.

  "Sri Lanka Cricket has called for his explanation in this regard."

  Muralitharan, who has been sent a letter by the board, has said his comments were misrepresented. "I never called anyone a chucker," Muralitharan told the Sydney Morning Herald.

  "All I said is that if you are accusing me of going over the level of tolerance, you have to look at your own bowlers too," he said.

  Muralitharan is set to resume bowling his controversial doosra, a disguised leg break, after the ICC committee recommended the change in the rules. The doosra has been measured at around 14 degrees.

  Muralitharan travels to Australia next week to meet Melbourne-based surgeon David Young who will assess his recovery from shoulder surgery in August. He hopes to return to top-class cricket in January when Sri Lanka will be touring New Zealand.

  Meanwhile, the International Cricket Council rubbished Australian reports that it had drawn up a list of bowlers with suspect actions even as officials moved to put a lid on the controversy.

  Media reports in Australia said the sport's governing body planned to target bowlers like Shoaib Akhtar of Pakistan, Harbhajan Singh of India and Muttiah Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas of Sri Lanka for their bowling actions.

  But ICC General Manager David Richardson, a former South African wicket-keeper, said in a statement the reports were "completely untrue."

  "To say that the ICC has a specific list of bowlers under scrutiny is completely untrue," said Richardson, who earlier this month chaired an expert sub-committee in Dubai on the issue of illegal deliveries.

  "The sub-committee was convened to look at the overall picture of the current regulations for dealing with potentially flawed bowling actions.

  "It dealt with principles and processes, not personalities. It had no mandate or responsibilities to report on specific players or their bowling actions and at no stage did it do so.

  "It is disappointing that this report has appeared without any attempt to discuss this issue with the ICC.

  "One phone call prior to publication could have dealt with this."

  The committee, which includes former test stars like Sunil Gavaskar, Aravinda de Silva, Angus Fraser and Michael Holding, recommended a new rule allowing bowlers to straighten their arms by up to 15 degrees.

  (Reuters)


评论英语学习论坛】【 】【打印】【关闭



Annotation


新闻查询帮助

热 点 专 题
阿拉法特逝世
驻伊美军围攻费卢杰
胡锦涛出席APEC峰会
有影响力企业领袖评选
世界杯预赛国足VS香港
歌手江涛涉嫌携带毒品
车市“小鬼”当家?
今冬采暖季节实用攻略
新北京规划为宜居城市



教育频道意见反馈留言板 电话:010-62630930-5178 欢迎批评指正

新浪简介 | About Sina | 广告服务 | 联系我们 | 招聘信息 | 网站律师 | SINA English | 会员注册 | 产品答疑

Copyright © 1996 - 2004 SINA Inc. All Rights Reserved

版权所有 新浪网
北京市通信公司提供网络带宽