Colombo:Legendary Sri Lanka off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan has confirmed that he will no longer be playing for Srilanka after the forthcoming World Cup in Asia.
The 38-year-old quit Test cricket last July after taking a record 800 wickets.
But he has remained in his country’s limited-overs side and will bow out after the World Cup, co-hosted by Sri Lanka, which begins on 19 February.
However, he has showed interest to play in the lucrative Indian Premier League after signing for new franchise Kochi.
Muralitharan, who helped Sri Lanka win the 1996 World Cup and was a losing finalist in 2007, has taken 517 wickets in 339 one-day internationals in a career which has spanned nearly two decades at the top level and left him as the world’s leading wicket-taker in both the major formats of the game.
MURALI’S INTERNATIONAL RECORD
Tests: 133 matches, 800 wickets, average 22.72 One-day internationals: 339 matches, 517 wickets, average 23.11 Twenty20 internationals: 12 matches, 13 wickets, average 22.84 |
“I’m going to retire from international cricket, totally, after this World Cup,”
Sri Lanka will face Canada, Pakistan, Kenya, Australia, Zimbabwe and New Zealand in Group A.
Meanwhile, he told reporters at a training session in Colombo that as well as signing to play in the IPL for the next two years, he was “also looking at similar work in New Zealand and perhaps England.”
But he ruled out an immediate move into coaching, adding: “There are plenty of coaches and lots of talented people out there.
“I am not interested in stuff like coaching at all, just now. The veteran spinner revealed. ”
MURALI’S 517 ODI WICKETS
95 v Pakistan (in 64 ODIs) 74 v India (in 62) 68 v New Zealand (in 39) 56 v Zimbabwe (in 30) 53 v Australia (in 39) 49 v South Africa (in 32) 32 v West Indies (in 25) 31 v Bangladesh (in 31) 26 v England (in 17) 33 v others (13 v Kenya, 4 v Ireland, 4 v Netherlands, 3 v Africa XI, 3 v ICC World XI, 3 v UAE, 2 v Bermuda, 1 v Canada |
Born in Kandy, Muralitharan’s unique bent-arm bowling action, caused by a deformity from birth, has meant that he has courted controversy at times during his career.
Some umpires and former players have questioned his action’s legality – notably in Australia, where umpires Darrell Hair and Ross Emerson no-balled him for throwing.
The mechanics of his bowling action have been investigated and cleared on more than one occasion by the International Cricket Council, although in 2005 the ICC amended its rules to allow bowlers to straighten their arms by up to 15 degrees.
Throughout much of his career, he battled with Australian leg-spinner Shane Warne for the title of the world’s leading wicket-taker.
But Warne retired from internationals in 2007 with 708 wickets from 145 Tests, and 293 victims from 194 ODIs – although he, too, continues to play in the IPL.
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