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Muralitharan misses tsunami narrowly!

December 28, 2004 12:43 IST
Last Updated: December 28, 2004 15:21 IST


The Sri Lankan cricket team wants to reschedule its tour of New Zealand in the wake of the devastation caused by a tsunami, which has killed over 12,000 people in their homeland, officials said on Tuesday.

The tour was put on hold on Monday for five days, in recognition of a Sri Lankan period of mourning, but the players now want it to be delayed indefinitely.

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New Zealand officials said on Tuesday the tour was set to resume and published a revised itinerary.

According to International Cricket Council (ICC) regulations, a tour can only be cancelled if there is a security threat to the players or the government of the nations involved call the teams back.

"I understand that the players are not too keen on playing," Sri Lanka Cricket president Mohan Silva said.

"But the board is bound by the International Cricket Council's Future Tours programme so we have to negotiate with them if the tour is to be cancelled.

"If individual players are affected, they can take a conscious decision to fly back home but the team will have to stay back as we are trying to negotiate with the ICC to reschedule the series."

INJURED MOTHERS

None of the Sri Lanka players lost family members in the island's worst disaster in living memory, officials said. But a local English newspaper reported the mothers of Sanath Jayasuriya and Upul Chandana had been injured.

"It's highly unlikely the ICC will bend the rules for one country but we are trying, considering the size of the humanitarian disaster," Silva said.

Sri Lanka's former world record wicket taker Muttiah Muralitharan said he narrowly missed being hit by the tsunami, and had been in one of the worst affected areas just minutes before it struck.

"I missed the wave by 20 minutes," Muralitharan told The Sydney Morning Herald. "I had only just left Galle so I am very lucky to be alive," he said.

Muralitharan, who is in Sri Lanka recovering from shoulder surgery, had visited Galle with his manager Kushil Gunasekera to hand out cricket bats to underprivileged children.

He had hoped to join the team for next month's Test series but said it would now be difficult for him to join his team mates.

"Something like this has never happened in my country," Muralitharan said. "In my opinion it is not the right time for cricket ... there is a lot of organising to do, a lot of feeding people."

Sri Lanka played New Zealand in the first of five scheduled one-day international matches on Sunday.

New Zealand won the match in Auckland by seven wickets with the second originally scheduled for Napier on Wednesday.

Sri Lanka and New Zealand are also set to play two Tests, in Hamilton from January 15-19 and Wellington from January 22-26.

 


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