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Murali breaks
Warne’s record
KANDY—Muttiah Muralitharan has become the leading wicket-taker in Test
cricket after breaking Shane Warne’s record of 708 Test wickets. Murali
dismissed Paul Collingwood during England’s first innings in Kandy to
take his 709th wicket.
Murali achieved the record in his 116th Test and on his home ground,
which had been eagerly awaiting the historic moment over the first two
days of the Test. After a difficult tour of Australia, where he managed
four wickets in two matches, Murali closed in on the milestone with four
wickets during the second day.
He drew level with Warne when he had Ravi Bopara caught down the leg
side on the second afternoon, but was forced to wait for the crucial
wicket through a mixture of rain, which forced the players off on Sunday
afternoon, and stubborn English resistance. It took him until his 10th
over of the day to squeeze out the cherished scalp as Collingwood and
Ryan Sidebottom offered stubborn resistance. Finally, though, in his
second spell of the day be bowled Collingwood with a doosra and the
ground erupted.
It is the third time Murali has held the wicket-taking record, having
originally passed Courtney Walsh in 2004 before briefly sharing the mark
with Shane Warne. He then claimed it outright for the second time
against South Africa until a shoulder injury allowed Warne to move back
to the top against India and Muralitharan has been chasing him since.
This time there is no one close to knocking him off and with a tireless
appetite for the game 1000 wickets is a possibility. Sri Lanka, trailing
by 93 runs on the first innings, easily cleared the deficit and ended
the third day’s play on 167-2 in their second knock, a lead of 74 runs
with eight wickets in hand. Muralitharan, 35, took 6-55 to surpass
retired Australian Shane Warne’s world record of 708 wickets as England,
resuming at their overnight score of 186-6, were bowled out for 281 just
before lunch.
Jayasuriya, 38, then made a spectacular 78 — including six boundaries in
one over from James Anderson — in what local media is speculating could
be the left-hander’s last Test match. It was Jayasuriya’s highest Test
score in 16 Tests since the last of his 14 centuries in Karachi in 2005
and was reportedly under pressure to call it a day or be axed. Michael
Vandort, who watched Jayasuriya blaze away at the other end, contributed
31 in an opening stand of 113 that was Sri Lanka’s best against England
for the first wicket.—Agencies |