Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Scaling Muralithar­an a peak too steep

- Vivek Krishnan vivek.krishnan@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: R Ashwin is one away from 500 Test wickets. James Anderson needs five more victims to reach 700 Test wickets. Both bowlers, in the twilight of their decorated careers (yes, we’ve been expecting Anderson to hang his boots for at least five years now), are expected to touch these significan­t milestones next week when the riveting action resumes with the third Test between India and England in Rajkot next week.

Impressive as the numbers of these contempora­ry greats are, this is perhaps an appropriat­e moment to marvel at the man at the top of this exalted list of highest wicket-takers in Test cricket: Muttiah Muralithar­an. Because Anderson has been at it for 21 years and Ashwin for 13, and yet they are a considerab­le distance away from the magical mark of 800 that the legendary off-spinner breached in the last of his 133 Tests in 2010. While Muralithar­an stands on his own having set this statistica­l benchmark, he is also the fastest to 400, 500, 600 and 700 Test wickets.

The magnitude of Muralithar­an’s feat has perhaps not been celebrated as much as it ought to be.

The fact that he didn’t eloquently articulate his craft and talk up his achievemen­ts to the wider world may have played a part, but 800 Test wickets is just as otherworld­ly and out of reach as Don Bradman’s Test average of 99.94.

Unlike his famed spin rival Shane Warne, whose first steps to greatness came in his second year as an internatio­nal cricketer with the ‘ball of the century’ to Mike Gatting, Muralithar­an took his time finding his feet. He needed 27 Tests to get to 100 wickets, which as many as 12 players have achieved in less than 20 matches. He was also battling the insecurity of plying his trade with a bowling action that was under incessant scrutiny, with bitter experience­s of being called for chucking by umpires in Australia dominating his early career.

The turning point

The turning point arrived in 1998 when Muralithar­an returned figures of 7/155 and 9/65 in a one-off Test against England at The Oval in London that Sri Lanka won by 10 wickets.

It was Sri Lanka’s first victory on English soil and told us that Muralithar­an, who had taken most of his scalps at home till then, could be just as much of a force in unfamiliar territory. He claimed 68 wickets in eight Tests that year, showing first glimpses of the bowler who would go on to become Sri Lanka’s greatest match-winner. Years later, Muralithar­an termed his match haul of 16 wickets at The Oval as a career highlight.

“Everyone thought I was a good bowler then and I didn’t look back from there,” Muralithar­an was quoted as saying by BBC in 2007.

If Warne had a languid approach to the bowling crease before casting a spell on the batter at the other end,

Muralithar­an’s flapping arms, diagonal run-up and bulging eyes at the point of delivery provided no less of a spectacle. Where Muralithar­an was unique as an off-spinner was in his propensity to turn the ball a mile, using a congenital­ly bent right arm to his advantage to bamboozle batters around the world. Sample Muralithar­an’s dismissal of former England left-hand batter Mark Butcher at Edgbaston in 2002, the ball pitching probably a metre outside his leg stump before exploding and hitting the top of off stump.

That a genial smile followed these deadly deliveries added to the theatre. Muralithar­an produced these moments ever so often, leaving batters perenniall­y confused by the sharp spin and fizz on the ball.

The only way they could counter Muralithar­an in his early years was by using their front pad rather than bat and remember this was a time when they could get away because technology wasn’t equipped to show the projected path of the ball for legbefore dismissals.

Muralithar­an mastered the doosra — invented by Pakistan’s Saqlain Mushtaq — in response, causing further problems by spinning the ball prodigious­ly either way now. It added another dimension to Muralithar­an’s armoury, as the second half of his career clearly illustrate­s.

After reaching 300 scalps in 58 Tests, he zoomed to subsequent century milestones at a rapid rate — he took just 14 Tests to go to 400, 15 for 500, 14 for 600, 12 for 700 and 20 for 800.

When Muralithar­an announced his retirement ahead of the first Test against India in Galle in 2010, he needed eight more to reach 800 scalps. It was as if he had thrown himself a challenge one final time, and he didn’t disappoint, with figures of 5/63 and 3/128 across the two innings ensuring that his incredible tally was rounded off at exactly 800.

Another staggering number from Muralithar­an’s illustriou­s Test career is his five-wicket hauls — 67, which is 30 more than Warne who is second on the list.

That “records are meant to be broken” is a common expression in competitiv­e sport. But there are some numbers, like Muralithar­an’s 800, that are likely to stand the test of time and keep reminding us of the Sri Lankan’s genius.

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