I wasn't saying he was dominating the aussies the whole time, but in the first innings of those matches he almost ran through them. The aussies were good enough to not fail twice in a row to him though.
I brought in the numbers to show that it was far from a rout - not sure how to show that simply without the numbers. Maybe I should bring up the 6/59 in the galle test and other examples instead?
Equating Warnes record in India where he was barely effective to a series in which Murali was played well by the Aussies but still managed to be very effective while getting little support is a huge stretch imo, but I'm sure you know that as well.
The point is that even great bowlers occasionally get beaten. The other wickets he took and his overall numbers don't change that he didn't take the
key wickets at the times of the game when SL really needed him to.
I watched most of the series and the 6-fer at Galle is a reasonable example of what I'm talking about, actually. The initial breakthroughs were provided by everyone else then Martyn and Lehmann put on runs. Murali noticeably backed off despite the ball absolutely ragging early in the game. Someone else broke the partnership, Lehmann had a moment and then Murali took the rest of his wickets in a rush at the end.
The Aussies had been cleaned up but their tactics were pretty clear; play shots early and make him back off because early in your innings is where he nails you. This was noted and commented on by Steve Waugh after the '99 tour. Murali was a fabulous bowler so he's going to take wickets especially at home. But the tactics against him meant that when the game was there to be won, the Aussies loaded up and made the other wickets he took basically irrelevent in the context of the series. That's how they won, despite Murali's numbers being really good.
The old adage of 'it's not how it's how many' is limited. In terms of getting the W, also matters
when you do well. On this occasion, when it mattered in the context of the series, Murali was able to be beaten.
EDIT: I should point out that the tactics needed excellent execution too. You saw in the dismissals at Galle of guys like Hayden and Gilchrist where it didn't come off. But, again, the
intent was clear.