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http://www.theage.com.au/news/cricket/atapattu-slams-selectors/2007/11/10/1194329570266.html
Atapattu slams selectors
Chloe Saltau
November 11, 2007
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SRI LANKA'S tour of Australia was in crisis last night after former captain Marvan Atapattu described the chief selector as a joker and his fellow selectors as muppets, while Australia's new-look bowling attack pushed the tourists within eight wickets of defeat in the first Test at the Gabba.
Having weathered a Brett Lee-led onslaught for more than four hours in the first innings, only to be forced to bat again, the 37-year-old opener, who was included in the squad only after government intervention, launched an extraordinary attack on chairman of selectors Asantha de Mel and his representative on tour, Ranjith Madurasinghe.
"I must tell you that Sri Lankan cricket at this point in time, I don't think it is going in the direction it should be going, especially with a set of muppets basically headed by a joker. I don't give credit to the way they have handled things," Atapattu said.
He accepted an invitation from Sri Lankan sports minister Gamini Lokuge only after checking that the two-Test tour fitted in with his plans and was his team's highest scorer with a defiant 51 in the first innings despite not having played competitively since a stint with English club Lashings five months ago.
He insisted Sri Lanka's was a harmonious dressing room in spite of the selection controversy.
"I think we should have a good back-up, but for some reason we don't and at the age of 37, 38 people have to come and play for Sri Lanka on tough tours like this. If selectors are only there for going on tours and getting whatever they are getting, it's a waste of time," Atapattu said.
"We are a happy dressing room at the moment, I'm telling you. People from outside are trying to create this unpleasantness from media and non-playing ex-cricketers giving statements to displease us, but I don't think they have succeeded."
Sri Lanka will start the fourth day at 2-80, trailing by 260 after Australia coped admirably without retired champions Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne with impressive contributions from their direct replacements, debutant Mitchell Johnson and Stuart MacGill.
MacGill removed Chaminda Vaas to claim his 199th Test wicket, and could today become the 13th Australian to join the elite 200 club in his attempt to bowl Australia to victory.
But it was Lee, in his new role as spearhead of the Australian atttack, who was the most dangerous of the Australians, taking 4-26 from 17.5 overs in the first innings and unveiling a new celebration in which he turned to umpire Rudi Koertzen and raised his finger in a pistol-like gesture.
Ricky Ponting enforced the follow on for only the second time from six opportunities in his captaincy, hoping to move in for the kill and wrap up the Test inside four days. Lee and Andrew Symonds heaped more pressure on the tourists by dislodging openers Atapattu and Sanath Jayasuriya before stumps.
"Everybody did their jobs. We tried to bowl in partnerships today. The key was to stay patient … on what is a flat wicket," Lee said.
Atapattu lamented his side's lack of fight in the first innings, but said the Australians seemed to have managed a seamless transition into the post Warne-McGrath era.
"They are getting together and putting up a collective effort. It's hard to replace two world-class bowlers like that but I'm sure in times to come these guys will stand up and become as good as Warney and McGrath," he said.
"We didn't do justice to our talents … in the first innings. We got some good early balls but that's not a good enough excuse. It is much easier in the second innings, it's only the variable bounce to be careful of. We should get a good partnership going and hopefully be in a better position tomorrow."