[The media pounced on the name 'Muttiah Muralitharan' for reasons that had only a cursory reference to cricket. Made me recall all that he gave us, year after year after year. Took me back to the final test he ever played. This is something I wrote at the time]
It is the fifth ball of over number 54 in the first test against India at Galle. The bowler is Muttiah Muralitharan. The batsman, Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Here’s the commentary: ‘Muralitharan to Dhoni, OUT, 86.5 kph, 794! And watta ball! Sharp turn from the rough outside off, Dhoni gets his foot across but half heartedly hangs his bat out, bowled through the gate, wasn't expecting so much turn’
You won’t see that again, not ‘live’ that is. Not unless the Smiling Assassin comes out of
retirement. A man has a right to retire
or to hang around until he is retired.
We can never resolve the debate whether this was the correct time for
Murali to call it a day. We can’t
complain, though. He’s given us 18
years. Over 1500 magical wicket-taking
moments. He’s held brilliant catches and
been involved in run outs that required more than a single replay in order to
fully digest the poetry of collect and throw.
Each ball he faced, those he missed, those that saw his stumps
disarranged, caught somewhere that the ball went on account of hit or mis-hit
or dispatched to the boundary or over it, was pure entertainment. That’s a lot of ‘To be cherished’ moments. All that’s over by the time you read this.
He will be remembered.
There will be the doubters no doubt, but he will not be forgotten. His career will be dissected meticulously and
the ‘top ten’ classic ‘Murali Moments’ will be debated and determined. Those fascinated with statistics will peruse
data bases, compare and contrast and proclaim again and again ‘He is
King!’ It will be pointed out that
Murali has 67 ‘five-fors’ in 133 tests as opposed to 37 by the next in line,
Shane Warne, who needed 8 tests more; that he had 22 match-hauls of 10 or more
wickets whereas Warnie has just 10, that he had a better average, economy rate
and strike rate that Shane.
Lesser known details will emerge. Murali, for example, has a strike rate close
to 70 in test cricket. Over 55% of his
runs in tests have come in fours and sixers.
He also holds the
record for scoring most runs in test cricket while batting at the number 11
position.
Some of the not-so-pretty records will also be
mentioned. Murali has the third highest
number of runs (99) hit in a One Day International innings.
Imran Coomaraswamy, writing for ‘Transcurrents’ on this
remarkable cricketing personality, points out that Sri Lanka’s 30 plus home
test victories since the turn of the millennium were based on a simple formula:
‘bat first, bat big and let Murali do the rest’. He refers to the test again Shaun Pollock’s
South Africans in 2000. Sanath
Jayasuriya, who readily attributes his admirable win-loss ratio as captain to
Murali’s spinning skills, summed it up nicely, Imran recounts: ‘Murali bowled very well and
everything else just fell into place.’
That was a 13 for 171 effort from 76 overs.
Yes,
Muttiah Muralitharan will be remembered.
We will remember all the good things he gave us. What will Murali remember, I wonder. What does he remember? We will not remember the fourth ball of the
18th over of India’s
first innings in Murali’s last test match.
Virendra Sehwag jumped out, got to the pitch and lofted it straight past
the bowler and over the fence. SIX. He
might remember that. Over the years,
Murali has bee hit all over the ground. He’s been stingy, yes, but not immune
to the occasional onslaught. He has had
to think on his feet, adjust variation, strategize each of the over 50,000
deliveries he sent down to the various batsmen at the other end of the pitch,
take as much as he gave, suffer insult as well as assault, in and out of the
field. We won’t remember, but he might.
During
his first test he scalped Tom Moody with a delivery that pitched at least 2
feet outside off-stump. Moody had
shouldered his arms and the ball had dislodged leg-stump. Eighteen years and hundreds of wickets later,
few will notice that Murali took 210 wickets in losing causes, that there was
very little to celebrate in getting five-fors when your team has lost. We will not know what went on inside the
man’s mind and heart during the lows of his career. He keeps a lot to himself, it seems, both on
and off the field.
The
statisticians will tell you how many fours and sixers he yielded, how many
wickets in tests, ODIs and T20 matches, strike rates with bat and ball, catches
taken, catches missed, how many LBW decisions, how many batsmen he lured out of
the crease so that Kalu, Sanga or Prasanna could stump them, the number of ‘Man
of the Match’ Awards in his name and other such facts.
What
will I remember, ten years from now, if I am alive and can still recall? I
think I would remember his smile. I
would recall that fierce competitor though he was, he never rubbed salt in
wound and never crowed over those he humbled with his exceptional spinning
skill. He did his work. He took what blows came his way. He stood
tall. He was slighted, but slighting was
alien to him. He worked. Bowled. I am sure none of his victims felt
belittled; they were just out-thought by a maestro who used ball, fingers,
wrist, brain, state-of-pitch, weather conditions, match-situation, batsman’s
temperament and his heart to create cricketing poetry.
I
would like him to play forever and would like to imagine that he will never
grow old. In the end that’s not
important. What matters is that we were
privileged to be born in this time, to share this earth with him, and to be
entertained by him. Where life might
take Muttiah Muralitharan after he leaves test cricket, I cannot predict. I can just say this: ‘Thank you Murali for
the 3,282,023 or so reasons you’ve given us to be proud of you, ourselves and
our nation, Sri Lanka’.
msenevira@gmail.com
3 comments:
Firstly, I'm surprised there's no comments for this like on FB or Youtube. It was emotional and I'm privileged to read this and I feel every Sri Lankan should read this including Murali. You should publish this on the Nation my friend. It's for Murali the great Son of Sri Lanka.
This was written just after that last test. It was published in the Daily News.
I had written earlier regarding this great son of Sri Lanka ! With him we shared our first great victory in Cricket and gave us both international fame and glory, with his wise words he has given us more he has opened a new dawn,and a bright future for this blessed land our Sri Lanka.Bless you Murali ! and thank you Malinda for this exceptional review!
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