Cricket Country Staff
Editorial team of CricketCountry.
Record-breaking Sri Lanka off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan bowed out of international cricket on the losing side as India won the World Cup final by six wickets on Saturday.
Written by Cricket Country Staff
Published: Apr 03, 2011, 11:07 AM (IST)
Edited: Apr 03, 2011, 11:07 AM (IST)

Sri Lankan bowler Muttiah Muralitharan bowls to Indian batsman Mahendra Singh Dhoni during the ICC Cricket World Cup final at Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. The record-breaking Sri Lanka off-spinner bowed out of international cricket on the losing side as India won the World Cup final by six wickets on Saturday
Mumbai: Apr 3, 2011
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Record-breaking Sri Lanka off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan bowed out of international cricket on the losing side as India won the World Cup final by six wickets on Saturday.
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Murali, who will 39 later this month, had said before the tournament he would retire after this World Cup.
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He went into the final with 800 wickets in 133 Tests and 534 in one-day internationals, both world records.
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But in his 350th one-day international a half-fit Murali was rendered wicketless, his eight overs costing an economical 39 runs but without quite the same sharp turn that made him so difficult to face for so long.
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Muralitharan’s longevity as a top-flight player could be seen from the fact he was the sole survivor in the current side from the Sri Lanka team that beat Australia to win the 1996 World Cup final in Lahore.
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His career, although littered with individual records, was highly controversial on account of his unorthodox action.
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Born with a bent elbow, he was called three-times for ‘throwing’ by Australian umpires in the mid 1990s.
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He was also once called a ‘chucker’ by John Howard — a comment which would later help scupper the former Australian Prime Minister’s bid to become president of the International Cricket Council.
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Repeated bio-mechanical tests indicated his action was legal.
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But when the ICC amended their rules on bowling actions to allow for 15 degrees of flexibility in 2005 many critics felt it was a decision designed solely for Murali’s benefit and a move to appease cricket’s powerful ‘Asian bloc’.
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©AFP
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