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World Cup: Darrell Hair still thinks Muttiah Muralitharan is a chucker

The Australian said umpires officiating in the World Cup are convinced the Sri Lankan’s action is not clean but don’t call him as they fear for their jobs.

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International cricket umpires know Sri Lanka spinner Muttiah Muralitharan’s bowling action is suspect but refuse to call him for fear of “rocking the boat”, according to former Australian Test umpire Darrell Hair.

Hair, who controversially no-balled Muralitharan seven times for throwing in a Melbourne Test in 1995, also said in Saturday’s Herald Sun newspaper that the Sri Lankan had bowled illegally a number of times during his team’s 11-run loss to Pakistan at the World Cup last week.

“A couple of current umpires have said to me, ‘Something is wrong’, but they prefer to let it go,” said Hair.

“There is still a lot of doubt about his deliveries. A few (officials) have told me, ‘There is definitely something wrong with his action, but I’m not going to call him’. They are the ones who have to live with that. If you’re an umpire you’re meant to uphold the law so both teams get a fair shake.

“There have been some umpires who think, ‘I’m on a good wicket here, I’m making good money, I won’t rock the boat’. It’s not my style, it’s obviously theirs.”

Doubts over his bowling have dogged Muralitharan since he was no-balled by Hair in 1995 but the 38-year-old Sri Lankan’s bowling was cleared by the ICC twice.

Extensive tests concluded that Muralitharan’s action “created the optical illusion of throwing” and because of an elbow deformity, the bowler’s arm remains bent in delivery and does not straighten.

“I watched a few of his deliveries in his game against Pakistan and I noticed the last few overs when he was really getting some turn on the ball, those wouldn’t have complied under scrutiny,” Hair added.

“But this is his last World Cup, he’s going to bow out with a lot of fanfare and no umpire will be bothered by it.”

The controversial Australian was temporarily banned from officiating in 2006 after Pakistan became the first country to forfeit a match in more than a century of Test cricket after a walkout.

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