marc71178 said:
Well that is exactly what's happening when you think about it.
Without this Doosra, the whole thing wouldn't have been looked at.
You are SO missing the point. Why hinge how we look at the truth of this matter by how the question got raised in the first place?
When it emerges (as it has) that the vast majority of bowlers past and present have been "breaking the laws" when it comes to what constitutes a legal delivery, it SHOULD give us all a big shock, and we ought to reconsider assumptions we might have made (particularly concerning Murali) in the past.
Personally, I've been extremely critical of Murali's action up to this point. I thought he was a chucker. This report surprised the hell out of me. Although I was always in favor of the study, I genuinely thought it would back up my opinion of the facts. Upon reading the results, about the best I can say to Murali IS "sorry, mate, you WERE unfairly targeted." In my defence, I would say that this occurs because of how he looks when he delivers the ball. The visual impression is that the degree of straightening on his part is egregious, but what the research just done tells us is that in fact, he's just in the same ballpark as the other bowlers out there that are breaking the ICC's regulatory guidelines.
Having read this, I don't think we can live in denial on this issue from this point. It's porbably the case that some of the researchers were motivated to pursue this study in order to clear Murali, but if they were right, shouldn't we care more about the objective truth than we do about discrediting them on the basis of their motives (particularly given that what was motivating them was a desire for the truth to be understood)?
That the news reports were still focussed on the "accommodation" of Murali is a little disingenous, really, when what the research actually suggests is that people we've never questioned were in exactly the same boat.