Local media have raised suspicions of Sri Lankans throwing the match, but there was no formal call for an investigation till Ranatunga's outburst. Ranatunga's spokesman Thamira Manju told AFP that he was writing to President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe complaining about the state of cricket in the country. There have been recriminations in the country since Sri Lanka suffered a humiliating 3-2 loss to bottom-ranked Zimbabwe in a five-match one-day series on home soil this month. There is also growing tension between Sri Lankan sports authorities and players about the use of managers, including an agent who represents more than half the national team.I will someday reveal the truth about 2011 WC final: Arjuna https://t.co/2keJ480WYZ pic.twitter.com/B91IWPxTxN
— DailyMirror (@Dailymirror_SL) July 14, 2017
"I demand an immediate inquiry in to Lahore attack & 2011 WC Final"#ArjunaRanathunga #Cricket #lkahttps://t.co/DVAYpbPND1— Arjuna Ranatunga (@ArjunaRanatunga) July 14, 2017Sports Minister Dayasiri Jayasekera has said he wants to regulate agents in cricket in a bid to prevent the possibility of one individual fixing matches using a network of players under his management. Former skipper Kumar Sangakkara, who led Sri Lanka in the 2011 World Cup defeat, has publicly defended his manager, a foreign national, who is also an agent for many other local players. Last year, the ICC imposed a three-year ban on a top Sri Lankan official Jayananda Warnaweera for failing to cooperate with an anti-corruption investigation. Warnaweera, a former Test player who was facing a two-year domestic ban over allegations of involvement in match-fixing, failed to attend interviews with an ICC anti-corruption unit.
Sri Lankan players and umpires have been accused of match fixing in the past, but Warnaweera was the high ranking official to be found guilty and penalised. Sri Lanka's cricket board suspended a fast bowling coach and sacked a part-time employee for their alleged roles in approach to two Sri Lankan players to arrange a defeat by West Indies at Galle in October 2015. An unnamed man linked to a bookmaker had offered the two players some 10m rupees (around $70,000) to lose the match. Betting is illegal in most of the cricket-mad Indian subcontinent, but backstreet bookmakers - many with underworld links - still flourish. Although no big-name Sri Lankan player has ever been convicted of corruption, several former stars have made allegations of match fixing or spot-fixing - when players deliberately bowl or field badly to give away a set number of runs."I'm prepared to take over SLC if requested by President & PM to bring together a collaborate squad for WC-2019" #AR https://t.co/QfEJKsU15g
— Arjuna Ranatunga (@ArjunaRanatunga) July 13, 2017