honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
The problem is, Sean, there are just as many "Murali is nowhere close to Warne" guys as there are "Warne is nowhere close to Murali" guys. I do believe that Warne was the better bowler in that series, but honestly, not by much... I dunno about Richard but I would definitely be panicking if I am gonna rate Dilshan as one of the better players of spin in my team. I think THAT particular Sri Lankan side wasn't so good against spinners.I've made several posts on this forum in the past saying more or less exactly this. You can say whatever you like about Warne and Murali, but the fundamental weakness in statistical comparisons between the two is that the playing field has never been level. Issues always come up about Warne playing England so much and Murali playing Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, Murali playing on Sri Lankan wickets, Warne not facing his own team etc. The closest it ever came to a level playing field was that series IMO, with both bowlers reasonably close to their best, fit and playing in the same conditions, and Warne was clearly the better bowler over those three games, for the reasons you mention.
It certainly doesn't mean that Warne was always a better bowler, but for the Murali fans who argue that Warne doesn't even warrant comparison to Murali, that series would be one to forget.
And I think the main reason was that, against Warne, the only way you are ever really gonna do much against him is by attacking him. And the likes of Atapattu, Tillekeratne, and perhaps Jayawardene at that time were reasonably good at blocking out spinners (and their success against the likes of Kumble and Harbhajan shows that), they were not all that good when it comes to pulling off a dominant innings or two against quality spinners. And Warne is the sort of bowler who will basically sit on you if you allow him to dictate to you and that is how I think he ended up being so good in that series. Overall, it is reasonable to believe that the likes of Atapattu and Tillkeratne are better players of spin compared to a Katich and Gilchrist, in that particular series and given that they were up against Warne, I would have rather had the Katichs and the Gilchrist than the Tillekeratnes and Dilshans. It is no secret to see why they weren't as effective as when Aravinda was around as he was someone who would play his shots and do it well against someone like Warne. Not saying he alone made the difference in the previous series, but I am just saying that with someone like him around, it would have changed Warney's thought processes a little bit. But with these guys, he gets a licence really, given the fact that they hardly ever attack and even if they do, they are very very less likely to succeed...
This may also, to an extent, show up why Dravid seems to struggle against Warne unless he has had a bit of quality attacking batting support from somewhere else in the line up. Even in Nagpur, I think this showed up, in 2004...... Strokeless but excellent in defence guys are just virtual Warney bunnies, IMHO.....