Tamil Nadu, Andhra settle for a tame draw

The P Ramachandra Trophy Under-22 match involving Tamil Nadu andAndhra at the AC Tech College Ground in Chennai on Friday meandered toan inconclusive draw. Tamil Nadu who declared having scored 438 fornine, earned five points by virtue of the first innings lead while Andhrahad to be content with three. So far, from two matches Tamil Nadu has goteight points and Andhra six.Andhra, who were tottering at 100 for 7 at the end of the second day,managed to add a further 64 runs to their first innings total. The Andhraskipper IG Srinivas (53) was the topscorer while Y Venugopal Rao (37) andGyneshwara Rao (21) chipped in with useful contributions. The Andhra lowerorder succumbed to the slow leftarmers of R Ramkumar (5 for 28).Following on 274 runs behind, and with a draw their only hope, Andhramanaged to hold the fort for 43 overs while scoring 128 for 2 when stumpswere finally drawn. Ram Kumar was again among the wickets as he dismissedboth openers Taher Hussain (7) and Anil Kumar (37). However Gyaneshwar Rao(41) and NM Khan (35) remained unbeaten while sharing a 58-run third wicketstand.Earlier on the second day, Tamil Nadu continued from where they leftoff to pile up a huge total. Skipper SV Saravanan (86) and SS Viswanathan(30) added 89 runs for the fourth wicket in 21.5 overs.With the score at 331, Viswanathan was caught by Khan off Faiq. Three ballslater, Saravanan departed, caught by Taher Hussain off Srinivas.R Satish (63) and K Manoharan put on 89 runs for the sixth wicket in 17.2overs. Thereafter three more wickets fell for the addition of 13 runs whenthe Tamil Nadu skipper declared the innings.In reply, Andhra were off to a bad start losing both the openers withineight balls. Taher Hussain was the first to go caught by Hemanth Kumar offShrinivas off the second ball of the innings. Then off the fourth ball ofthe second over Anil Kumar was caught bu Ram Kumar off Balaji. GyneshwarRao (21) and Venugopal Rao (37) however added 64 runs for the third wicketin 17.5 overs.At 66, Venugopal Rao was dismissed, caught by Manoharan off Bhatia. Thenext over was the exit of Gyneshwar Rao, caught by Vidyuth off RamKumar. Thereafter Andhra struggled to reach the 100-run mark whilelosing three more wickets at stumps.

Flower brothers lead Zimbabwe fightback

Zimbabwe enjoyed much the best day of the First Test against India atthe Queen’s Sports Club in Bulawayo, batting throughout the third dayto finish on 303 for seven. The main contributors, as so often forZimbabwe, were the Flower brothers, Andy and Grant, who both scoreddetermined fifties, as did Stuart Carlisle.Night-watchman Brian Murphy did not last long into the morningsession, out to a fine diving catch by Shiv Sunder Das at short legfor his overnight 10 off Zahir Khan, who had just received his secondwarning for running on the danger area of the pitch. Ashish Nehra,another left-armer, bowling over the wicket, was also to receive asecond warning later.Carlisle, although beaten occasionally, played some good strokes,especially drives and cuts, and it was a fine drive through extracover that brought him his fourth Test fifty. His highest is 58, andonce again he failed to reach 60. When 52, he played back loosely toNehra and was caught at second slip. Zimbabwe were still 21 behindwith half their wickets gone.Once again the Flower brothers were together with almost everythingdepending on them. Andy Flower was playing far more typically than hedid in the first innings, choosing his deliveries carefully andwaiting for the bad ball to put it away unerringly. At lunch Zimbabwewere 143 for five, still two runs in arrears.A reverse sweep for four by Andy Flower off Harbhajan Singh in thelatter’s first over after lunch took Zimbabwe into the lead. It wasnot long before a similar stroke brought up his ninth fifty in tenTest innings. It was the ninth time in 12 Test innings against Indiathat Andy has passed 50. Only once have India been able to dismiss himfor less (when he made 30) as on the other two occasions he was notout.India strove in vain to break the fraternal partnership until thesecond new ball was due in the last over before tea. Once again thebrothers proved how they have been the backbone of Zimbabwe’s battingduring the country’s nine-year Test history. At the interval Zimbabwewere 230 for five, 85 runs ahead.Andy Flower disappointed in the first over after tea. He slashed atNehra and the thick edge just cleared the slips and went to theboundary. Off the very next ball, he failed to profit from the warningand sliced a hard catch into the slips where Sadagoppan Ramesh took itvery well. He scored 83, another fine innings, but must have beendisappointed to give his wicket away through the basic error offailing to play himself in again after an interval, and immediatelyafter receiving a warning the previous ball. He also missed the chanceof recording his tenth Test century. The brothers had put on 101 runstogether, and neutralized the threat of Harbhajan very effectively.Heath Streak almost immediately had the benefit of a very close lbwappeal against Nehra, but survived to fight again. Grant Flowerreached his fifty, a fine effort after some trouble early on. Streak(14) played inside a ball from Zahir Khan to be out lbw; at thispoint, with only the inexperienced Andy Blignaut and two tail-endersto partner Flower, Zimbabwe were only 128 ahead.Shortly afterwards umpire Harper bit the bullet and removed Nehra fromthe attack, after two previous warnings from umpire Tiffin at theother end for persistently running on the danger area of the pitch.Blignaut, initially very nervous, gradually settled in and gaveoccasional evidence of the powerful hits for which he is renowned indomestic cricket. Flower seemed to go into his shell, playing for theclose, which ended due to bad light `only’ 30 minutes after thescheduled close with two overs unbowled. Flower had 67 and Blignaut11.

Somerset despatch Essex with some ease

With some formality, Somerset completed their fifth win of the season, beating relegated Essex by nine wickets to take 19 points and enhance their quest for runners-up position in the Cricinfo Championship.It was the twin spin partners of Keith Dutch and Ian Blackwell who masterminded the downfall of the home side with five wickets between them on a pitch offering slow turn as Essex endured their seventh Championship defeat of the season.They had begun the day still requiring 194 runs to avoid an innings defeat but the loss of two early wickets, those of Paul Grayson and Richard Clinton before the 100 was on the board, left the visitors totally in control.Their pursuit of victory was held up by a partnership of 88 in 26 overs between Stuart Law and Ronnie Irani before the latter fell leg before wicket to Richard Johnson for 32.James Foster gave Johnson his third wicket of the innings, totally beaten by pace and losing middle stump, but the loss of Law in the next over ensured Somerset’s success.The Australian, almost certainly playing his last home Championship innings in an Essex sweater, entertained the crowd with 66, a performance that contained trademark drives that have been so much a feature of his six-year stay with the county.He was attempting to complete the 13th boundary of his innings when he pulled a delivery from Blackwell into the hands of mid-wicket to leave Essex 191-6 and the slow left-armer soon had Ashley Cowan caught at the wicket.An enterprising eighth-wicket partnership between Graham Napier and Justin Bishop added 64 and ensured Somerset would have to bat again but the persevering Blackwell finally claimed Napier when the all-rounder pulled him to deep mid-wicket having scored 56 – a Championship-best.That left Dutch to wrap up the innings, taking the last two wickets in successive overs and leave his side requiring just 64 runs for victory, a task comfortably completed in 9.1 overs for the loss of Matthew Wood’s wicket.

Tom Graveney dies at the age of 88

Tom Graveney, the former England batsman, has died aged 88 after a long fight against Parkinson’s disease.Graveney gained a reputation as one of the most elegant batsmen in world cricket in the post-war years. But he proved there was substance behind his style in becoming the 15th of the 25 men to reach 100 first-class centuries – he was the first to do so since the Second World War – with 11 of them coming in his 79-Test career. 21 times he made 1,000 runs in a season – twice on tour – six times he passed 2,000 and four times he made a century in each innings of a match. 4,882 Test runs at an average of 44.38 tell their own story.He was almost lost to the game. He had decided upon a life in the military – he had been an army captain at the age of just 20 – but was introduced to Gloucestershire while on leave by his brother (“I can’t get one past him,” the swing-bowling Ken told the club by way of recommendation), who was already in the team, and went on to enjoy a quarter-of-a-century in the county game.While he was initially seen, at Gloucestershire at least, as a replacement for Wally Hammond, Graveney was never going to be to be that sort of player. He was more artist than accountant – ironic as accountancy had been his targeted profession while at grammar school – and too easy natured and full of fun to compare with the man he rated as the best batsman – Bradman included – on all types of wickets he ever saw.For a while the reputation – a largely unfair reputation – as something of a dilettante counted against him. He was viewed, by the England selectors at least, as somewhat brittle under pressure and it is true that his front foot technique – “I even hooked off the front foot,” he said, “I don’t know how I wasn’t killed,” – did not always look ideal on the quickest pitches. Only one of his Test centuries – a two-hour innings of 111 at Sydney in 1954 as makeshift opener – came in or against Australia.But against other opposition – including the fast bowlers of the West Indies (Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith) – he proved his class and his determination. He recovered from a serious bout of dysentery – he spent a week in hospital – to register his maiden Test century in his second Test – and his first overseas – in Bombay in 1951.The affable manner hid an inner steel. Dropped for the tour of South Africa despite enjoying a prolific 1956 season – he scored well over 2,000 runs – he made his point in eloquent style by stroking a sublime 258 in his second game back, against West Indies at Trent Bridge in 1957, and followed it with 164 in the next Test at The Oval.Then, after an absence of almost three years, he was recalled by England in 1962 to face Pakistan, against whom he made scores of 97, 153, 37 and 114 in consecutive Tests.He captained Gloucestershire in 1959 and 1960 but, after losing the captaincy, he decided to leave the club. Having turned down Leicestershire – he said he suffered splinters from the dilapidated pavilion every time he had a shower – he signed for Worcestershire and, having served the necessary qualification period – proved himself as good a batsman as any in the land. Twice (in 1964 and 1965) the club won the County Championship – the first time they had so in their existence – and Graveney was recalled to the England team, aged 39, in 1966. 24 more Tests – and four more centuries – ensued.”I was the best batsman in the country between 1963 and 1966,” he later said. “I just didn’t get picked. And then to be brought back after my 39th birthday was a bit ridiculous.”He captained England once. With Colin Cowdrey injured, Graveney took charge for the Ashes Test at Leeds in 1968 which ended in a draw, but he was rarely a favourite of the England hierarchy.He could at times be a forceful personality, a fact not always welcomed – and ce complained bitterly about safety on a tour of Pakistan in 1969. The previous year he lobbied hard for the inclusion of Basil D’Oliveira for the 1968 tour of South Africa, expressing his fury when D’Oliveira, a Cape Coloured, was initially omitted because of pressure from the apartheid regime.Eventually he went too far. He disobeyed the orders of the chairman of selectors, Alec Bedser, and travelled to Luton on the rest day of the Manchester Test to take part in a game organised as part of his benefit season. The match raised £1,000 – a huge sum to a man who complained that players were treated like “serfs” at the time and who later revealed he was earning £850 a year from Worcestershire at the time – and Graveney later admitted he had no real choice but to take part in it. His final two Test innings had brought scores of 105 and 75 but, hit with a three-Test ban at the age of 42, there was no way back.He briefly played and then coached Queensland before returning to England. For a while he ran a pub in Cheltenham – a natural home for a fellow with a friendly smile for all and who once remarked that beer was his “staple diet” during his playing days – but he then became a regular commentator with the BBC and was appointed MCC president – the first professional cricketer appointed to the position – in 2004.He would often bemoan the increase in the weight of bats, believing it reduced the ability to stroke the ball in the stylish way he had demonstrated, and he never accepted the end of the days of ‘walking’ when edging the ball (“In my day,” he said, “there were five people who didn’t walk and everyone knew who they were. Now there are only five who walk), but he was not out of touch. He celebrated the birth of T20 cricket and improved remuneration for players. He never fell out of love with the game.Instilled with a love of sport by a father who died when he was just six, he also retained a love of golf to the end – he used to say he had a single figure handicap for 57 years – and with a once beat a pair including Nick Faldo in a televised pro-celebrity event at Turnberry with a round of two under.”I count myself privileged to have seen Tom Graveney bat,” ECB Chairman Colin Graves said. “He was one of the game’s great stylists; a batsman whose name became synonymous with elegance and whose perfectly executed cover drive will live long in the memory of those who saw it.”He was also a true gentleman; someone who served our county game with distinction and who, later in life, gave back much to the game he so dearly loved by becoming MCC President.”Worcestershire chief executive David Leatherdale said: “Tom has been a major figure in Worcestershire’s history and everyone at the club is saddened by today’s news and our thoughts go out to the Graveney family at this sad time.”He was one of the stalwarts of our first two Championship triumphs and will be hugely missed by everyone at Worcestershire CCC and by cricket as a whole.”Tom’s brother, Ken Graveney, who also captained Gloucestershire and later became the club’s chairman and president, died aged 90 on October 26.

Hannon-Dalby inflicts more Test pitch misery

ScorecardOliver Hannon-Dalby celebrated a five-wicket haul [file picture]•Getty Images

Oliver Hannon-Dalby recorded the best List A figures for Warwickshire’s since 2004 as the Bears’ resurgence in the Royal London One Day Cup continued with a nine-wicket victory over Glamorgan.Former Yorkshire seamer Hannon-Dalby took 5 for 27 as the Bears followed their win over Lancashire at Old Trafford the previous day by ending the Welsh county’s unbeaten record in Group B.After choosing to bat, Glamorgan were dismissed for 179 as only Will Bragg made any progress against testing bowling led by Hannon-Dalby and leg-spinner Josh Poysden.Warwickshire then eased to their target with nine wickets and 71 balls to spare as Varun Chopra (80 from 104 balls) and Jonathan Trott (73 from 99) added an unbroken 157.On the pitch used for the Ashes Test match last week, Glamorgan’s top order found runs as elusive as most of the Aussies had. Bragg dug in but the other five members of the top six each failed to pass 13.After Jacques Rudolph edged Keith Barker to wicketkeeper Tim Ambrose, Hannon-Dalby picked up three wickets in his first six overs. Colin Ingram and David Lloyd chipped catches into the infield and Chris Cooke nicked to Ambrose.Poysden then struck in each of his first two overs. Bragg pulled hard and was brilliantly caught by William Porterfield at midwicket and when Mark Wallace leading-edged to cover the visitors were 108 for 6 and in serious need of impetus.Graham Wagg and Craig Meschede added 33 before Hannon-Dalby returned to oust the latter for 18 with the assistance of another fine Porterfield catch, this time at point. Meschede hit three fours but then holed out tamely against Jeetan Patel. Andrew Salter and Michael Hogan fiddled 22 from the last wicket but when Hannon-Dalby returned again to have Salter caught behind, Glamorgan looked well short.Porterfield gave Warwickshire’s reply early momentum with a 27-ball 22 and, after he played on to Hogan, Chopra and Trott, with time on their side, played with great composure and correctness.Trott was first to his half-century, from 68 balls, followed in the next over by Chopra, who scored just a single in the first seven overs but reached 50 from 78 balls. The pair saw Warwickshire through to an emphatic win over a Glamorgan side which itself had just recorded an emphatic win over an Essex team which had itself just recorded an emphatic win over Warwickshire. A crazy, unpredictable world, this Group B!

Otago girl takes six for none in schoolgirls' match

Otago Blue player Claire Thompson was the star of the day at the Southern Zone’s secondary schoolgirls’ cricket tournament in Oamaru today.Thompson returned the amazing figures of 6 for none off four overs, bowling against South Canterbury.She took four wickets in one over, and captured all of her scalps single-handed – bowling five and having the other trapped leg before wicket.Otago Blue scored 137 and Thompson’s efforts ensured South Canterbury fell well short being dismissed for 87.In today’s other matches Otago Gold scored 78/5 in reply to Canterbury Country’s 77, and Christchurch Red made no race of its game with Mid Canterbury scoring 126/1 chasing 125.

BCCI appoints ad-hoc committee to run Rajasthan cricket

The BCCI has constituted an ad-hoc committee to run cricket in Rajasthan and ensure the participation of teams from the state in the 2015-16 domestic season. Amrit Mathur, a former manager of the India team, will take over as the co-ordinator of the committee, which will comprise CK Khanna, Milind Kanmadikar, Snehal Parikh and PV Shetty.”This step is in line with the BCCI philosophy of keeping the interest of cricket and the players on top priority,” Jagmohan Dalmiya, the BCCI president, said. “Like any other side playing domestic cricket in India, Rajasthan cricketers will have all the facilities, exposure and opportunities to perform and excel.”According to a BCCI insider, an ad-hoc committee was the most logical option considering the complex situation in Rajasthan cricket, and remained the last hope for the state’s players to compete in the upcoming domestic season.The BCCI had suspended the Rajasthan Cricket Association (RCA) in May 2014 after the latter elected Lalit Modi, an expelled administrator, as its president. The board then omitted the RCA from the 2014-15 domestic programme.Rajasthan eventually got to play – though not under the RCA banner – after the Rajasthan High Court heard a writ petition signed by 75 players, and directed the Rajasthan Sports Council, the RCA and the BCCI to work in tandem and appoint selection committees to select teams for the board’s senior, junior and women’s tournaments. Mathur had helped facilitate the process.While that came as a boost for the players, the impasse between the BCCI and the RCA continued. The RCA remains suspended, and a faction led by Amin Pathan has staged a revolt against Modi’s body. As a result, the High Court hasn’t even allowed the Sports Council to run the state’s cricket affairs.

South African pain flows onto Auckland outfield

Dale Steyn went down on the Eden Park pitch. AB de Villiers, Faf du Plessis and Morne Morkel all went down on the outfield around him. When de Villiers got up, the other three stayed down. Even when their team-mates and then members of the South African support staff came to lift them to their feet, they would not move. Only when staying down became too painful too, they stood up.Then, with Morkel in Wayne Parnell’s arms, du Plessis in Amla’s, they wept. Together, separately, on camera, off camera, with 40,000 people chanting or in the complete silence inside themselves, they wept. They wept because that was all they had left to do.”We left it out on the field tonight,” de Villiers said. All of it. Every last drop of themselves. “That’s all I can ask of the guys. It’s obviously painful. It’s hurting quite a bit. We’re gutted.”South Africa did not hide the pain behind any bravado. They let their tears flow. Even the usually cool Amla allowed the ice to break. There was no shame in this defeat. There was tension, there was fight, there was honour but none of that means anything to South Africa now.”It doesn’t make me feel better at all, not at all, no,” de Villiers said when asked if he could take consolation in the epic competition of what has been this tournament’s best game. “We play this game to win games of cricket, to take glory home and make a difference to the nation, and we didn’t do that. We didn’t achieve that.”Was this the worst he had ever felt on a cricket field? “Yes,” he said. “But I don’t have any regrets about this campaign.”The actual analysis of what went right and what went wrong will be left for another day, or maybe even not at all given that many of the members of this squad will not play another fifty-over World Cup, but in the end, it came down to small moments. “You need a little luck. You need things to go for you. You need to take your opportunities. There is such a small margin between winning and losing,” Domingo said. That is what Domingo will have to remind his team more than anyone else.This time they were not knocked out because they conjured up a defeat from the cauldrons of certain victory but they fell into that tiniest of gulfs where the difference between winning and losing lies. Already Domingo has provided a steadying hand through a tournament of ups and downs, in which South Africa have surfed the full swell. They’ve been through the expectation, the success, the failure, the success and now the end. “The sun will come up again tomorrow like our coach said numerous times in this tournament,” de Villiers said.Domingo tried to say it again, by putting the emphasis on de Villiers and highlighting the character of the side. “I’m extremely proud of the way the captain has led the side. He’s done an outstanding job throughout this campaign. He’s backed up his talk with outstanding leadership and outstanding performances,” Domingo said. “And I’m so very proud of the effort they put in and the emotions that they left on the field. It’s testament to how much it means playing and how much trying to win a World Cup means for them. So if there’s any question on commitment, I think that can all be thrown out the window, because that is 15 men committed to cricket there.”But Domingo had to admit that those 15 men “are broken, there’s no doubt about it,” and that it was a “really, really tough loss for us”. De Villiers even took on the heartache of a nation, saying the team felt the pain of the people back home. “We so badly wanted to take that trophy back home, but I guess life moves on.” But right now he does not know where the road to recovery even starts.”I have absolutely no idea what to do from here on in. I don’t even know when we’re going home. It’s going to take some time to get over this,” de Villiers said. “As a captain, I’ll be there for the guys as much as I can, but there is nothing you can do about it now.” Nothing, because everything has been done. And this time even everything was not enough.

Collingwood keen on making final XI

Paul Collingwood: “I don’t know if I’m competing with Steve Harmison for a place but I’m as delighted for him that he’s back as I am for myself” © Getty Images
 

Paul Collingwood is relieved to be named in England’s squad of 13 for the Edgbaston Test, but he wants to return to the XI after being dropped to make way for Andrew Flintoff. A run of poor scores and Flintoff’s return to full fitness hurried Collingwood’s exit in Headingley, one he reckons as the worst moment of his career.”I worried about what this meant for me when I was left out of Headingley and it was without doubt the biggest disappointment of my career,” Collingwood told the . “The only thing that comes close to it was when I was left out of the second Test in Pakistan [in 2005] and I worried whether I would ever make it as a Test player. Thankfully, then I got back in when Straussy [Andrew Strauss] went home for the birth of his child and now I’ve got the chance to get back straight away now.”Collingwood’s Test sack came less than a month after he was banned for four limited-overs matches. He was penalised after England failed to bowl their overs in the required time, but he drew more flak for the controversial run-out of Grant Elliott. Collingwood chose to not withdraw an appeal after Elliott failed to make his crease after colliding with Ryan Sidebottom.”It’s nice to be involved immediately again but my priority now is to make the final XI,” he said. “After all that’s happened this year I just want to get things back on track now. It’s been a very difficult season for me but hopefully it will be a season of two halves and the better half starts now.”I just want this to be the spark, the catalyst, whatever word you want to choose, to get me going again. It’s been the worse year of my career but once you have got over the hurt you look at it and realise that hope is just around the corner.”I think you could see from my face when I was told I was out what it meant to me but to be honest I’m glad I was so hurt because it proved to me that I still have the passion and want to play for England as much as ever. I’d been in the team for 30-odd Tests and it was hard to get my head round that I wasn’t in the team any more. “Collingwood returned to county duties with Durham since his England omission, and scored a quickfire 78, including six sixes, in their Pro40 win over Middlesex. However, he failed to take his side past eventual champions Middlesex in the Twenty20 Cup semi-final on Saturday. His Durham team-mate, Steve Harmison, also earned a recall to the England squad, and both might be competing for a place depending on the combination England choose to adopt: either six batsman or five bowlers.”I don’t know if I’m competing with Steve Harmison for a place but I’m as delighted for him that he’s back as I am for myself,” he said. “The key thing for Harmy is that he’s as hungry as ever to play for England, the ambition is really there after all he’s been through.”He could have settled for a quieter life with Durham, but he really wants to play for England, like me, and every time I have been back to Durham people have said to me ‘you wouldn’t believe how fast Harmy is bowling’,” Collingwood said. “I think he’s benefited from a break but I hope my break is restricted to one game and I’m back in the team for Wednesday.”Harmison himself is eager to get back into the Test fold. “I’m not naïve – I know if I play the spotlight will be on me. I know people will be watching my every move and waiting with bated breath when I run up to bowl my first ball,” Harmison said. “I know that it is going to be tough and I know that I am going to be nervous. I know that after what happened at Headingley last week, the pressure will be on England and on me and the level of expectation will be high. And I know I have a point to prove, that I can still bowl at the highest level and take wickets for my country against a fine batting side.”But I would rather be going to Edgbaston, putting myself to the test and dealing with all those issues, than not. I’d rather be playing in front of 20,000 than 2000 at Trent Bridge. With all due respect to my Durham team-mates, I’d rather be playing for England.”Harmison was left out of England’s Test XI after an lacklustre effort in Hamilton, and has been ignored for subsequent Tests. He forced his way back with 40 wickets at 23.10 in the County Championship this season.Geoff Miller, England’s national selector, was impressed with Harmison’s domestic performances. “People are now saying he is in a better place than he was, and he now looks like the bowler he was a couple of years ago when he was striking fear into opposition batsmen,” Miller told the Miller also shut out talk of the return being premature. “There’s no risk at all. We wouldn’t have put him in if we thought there was a risk,” he said. “We talk to all the players regularly and I have watched him bowl this year and talked to him myself.”

Murali insists no grudges to bear in Australia

BRISBANE, Dec 12 AAP – Controversial Sri Lankan spinner Muttiah Muralitharan insists he holds no grudges with Australian cricket officials and he doesn’t expect to be called for throwing again in the country.Muralitharan has returned to the scene of his darkest cricketing moments, convinced there should no longer be a question mark over his bowling action.The 30-year-old hasn’t played in Australia since he was called for throwing in 1995-96 and 1998-99, recovering from the setback to rush into third place on the list of Test cricket’s most successful bowlers.Muralitharan, who recently underwent hernia surgery, hopes to return against Australia at the SCG on January 9 and he doesn’t expect any trouble from local umpires.”It doesn’t matter as long as everything is done right for me,” Muralitharan said in Brisbane today.”They can’t question me anymore, in my mind, because it’s gone.”It’s all past. I never thought about not coming to Australia. I always wanted to play here.”Sri Lankan officials said they had no problem with Australian umpires, even Darrell Hair, who first called Muralitharan for throwing during the Boxing Day Test in 1995.”What has happened has happened and we want to focus on the games in hand and not think about what has happened in the past,” tour manager Ajit Jayasekera said.Coach Dav Whatmore predicted Muralitharan was becoming a more potent bowler and warned he was developing a new delivery which could make him even more successful.But Muralitharan played down talk of the new ball – roughly an off-spinner’s version of the flipper – because of his recent injury problems.”I’m working on that but I haven’t played for a long time so I don’t know what will happen. You’ve got to keep on trying and maybe for the future,” he said.”I’m trying hard to bowl new balls and it might work or it might not work. It’s too early (to use in February’s World Cup) – you have to perfect it or else you go for runs.”Australian spinner Shane Warne believes Muralitharan is capable of setting records which could take decades to break, even tipping the Sri Lankan was capable of taking 1000 Test wickets.But Muralitharan, whose 437 wickets places him behind only Warne (491) and Courtney Walsh (519), has not set his personal goals above 600 victims.”It’s possible as long as you’re fit and I would like to play for another five years,” he said.”If I can play another 40 Tests and average five a match – that’s 200 wickets. I would like to play until the next World Cup.”But Whatmore said Muralitharan’s future depended on his ability to stay free of the injuries which have dogged him this year.”He’s got no regard for his body sometimes the way he throws it around the field,” Whatmore said.”He will need to be a little bit careful from the fitness side of things but his skill level is getting better and better.”Years ago you wouldn’t say that anyone would fear an off-spinner. A lot of teams do now.”

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