Australia: cricket's hell for Sri Lanka
AFP
26 January 1999
COLOMBO, Jan 26 (AFP) - Sri Lankan sports writers Tuesday dubbed
Australia as ``cricket's hell'' for Arjuna Ranatunga's team and demanded
an apology for ill-treating visitors playing in the tri-nation
tournament.
The Daily News said the calling of Sri Lanka's top spinner Muttiah
Muralitharan by Australian umpire Ross Emerson was to ``demoralise and
humiliate'' Ranatunga's team which beat Australia in the World Cup in
1996.
``The (current) tour of Australia for the ... one-day series has been
one helluva nightmare for Sri Lanka's cricketers,'' said writer Elmo
Rodrigopulle. ``On this tour the Lankans must be now experiencing what
it is like to be in cricket's hell.''
Rodrigopulle who is in Adelaide covering the Sri Lankan tour said
Ranatunga's team had been ``harassed, hounded and humiliated'' at every
turn since they arrived in Australia.
The Sri Lankan captain Ranatunga has been called before an
International Cricket Council (ICC) hearing after Saturday's
controversial one-day match against England in which Sri Lankan bowler
Muralitharan was no balled for throwing by umpire Emerson.
Following the call Ranatunga held a heated exchange with the umpire
and halted play for 12 minutes while the South African match referee,
Van der Merwe and Sri Lankan cricket officials were called to quell
the situation.
Hearing against Ranatunga was originally scheduled for Tuesday but it
was put off and Van der Merwe did not say when a fresh hearing into
the Sri Lankan skipper's behaviour would be held.
Another Sri Lankan sports writer, Sa'adi Thawfeeq, said the harassment
of the Sri Lankan team in Australia may actually drive them to perform
better at the forthcoming World Cup series in England.
``It seems the Aussies will never learn,'' Thawfeeq wrote Tuesday. ``They
needled the Sri Lankans so much on the 1995-96 tour that our boys got
so fired up to transform themselves from being an ordinary bunch of
cricketers to become the world champions of one-day cricket.''
The president of Sri Lanka's board of control for cricket, Thilanga
Sumathipala left for Australia on Monday to defend his team before the
ICC inquiry.
Copyright 1998-2001 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed on
this page (dispatches, photographs, logos), with the exception of CricInfo
logos and trademarks, are protected by intellectual property rights owned
by Agence France Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce,
modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any
of the contents of this section without prior written consent of
Agence-France-Presse.
|