Ranatunga accused Sri Lanka Cricket president Thilanga Sumathipala, 52, of being involved in gaming -- a claim Sumathipala denies -- and said he should not be allowed to hold office. "There is no proper discipline in the team... (but) no point in blaming the cricketers when they get involved in all these gambling things. First they have to get the officials in order," Ranatunga told AFP. There have been reports of attempts to approach Sri Lankan players for alleged match-fixing. Several officials, umpires and players have been suspended or fined for involvement in match-fixing or refusing to cooperate with investigations.'No point blaming the cricketers': Ranatunga trains his guns on the chief of Sri Lanka Crickethttps://t.co/wn9b2hBj5h pic.twitter.com/2DjqgxeHEf
— The Field (@thefield_in) August 9, 2017
Also Read: World Cup hero Ranatunga stops watching Sri Lanka
Ranatunga said the International Cricket Council should investigate Sumathipala over alleged gambling links and the conduct of the Sri Lankan board. "I want to know if the ICC has a backbone to check if these people (Sri Lanka Cricket management) are in compliance with ethics standards," Ranatunga told AFP. There was no immediate comment from the ICC. But Sumathipala denied the allegation and accused Ranatunga of a smear campaign in a bid to take over the board. Sumathipala said Sri Lanka's sports ministry and the ICC had both cleared him to hold office at SLC, as well as at the Asian Cricket Council and ICC.
"I deny any involvement personally, directly or indirectly with gaming business," Sumathipala told AFP. He also slammed Ranatunga, Sri Lanka's minister of petroleum, for accusing President Maithripala Sirisena's government of failing to protect the game. "If he wants to criticise the government, he must first resign," Sumathipala, said adding that allegations are frequently made against the board when the national team performs badly. "Every time the game is affected at the middle, Sri Lanka cricketers are not performing to the expectation, we hear this kind of noise coming from the same quarter," Sumathipala said. He added that Ranatunga was hoping to oust him as Sri Lanka's cricket chief, a position he tried and failed to secure in elections in January 2016."Bodies and the six-packs get you models, not cricketers", says Arjuna Ranatunga: https://t.co/gc7JpzOKop pic.twitter.com/CPNmpfeJrb
— Wisden Sri Lanka (@Wisden_SL) August 8, 2017
"The same man (Ranatunga) is continuously making every effort undemocratically, unethically to hold office of Sri Lanka Cricket, even when he has been democratically defeated more than once," Sumathipala said. Ranatunga and his younger brother Nishantha stood against Sumathipala at last year's board elections and lost. The next elections are due in five months. Since retiring from the game, Ranatunga has entered politics and he was an unelected cricket administrator in 2008.Sri Lankan Cricket is going in the wrong direction, says Arjuna Ranatunga in a no-holds barred interview https://t.co/zBU2upZDCU
— Cricbuzz (@cricbuzz) August 7, 2017
Authorities have not responded to his demand that an interim committee run Sri Lankan Cricket. "I thought OK, if the government thinks this is right -- and I am part of this government -- I tried to take a step back and allowed them (the board) to run. They have messed up everything," Ranatunga said. Last month Ranatunga also demanded an investigation into the country's 2011 World Cup final defeat by India, which was accompanied by allegations of match-fixing. Sports minister Dayasiri Jayasekera said he was willing to order a probe if there was a written complaint.#ArjunaRanatunga urges @ICC to probe @OfficialSLC chiefhttps://t.co/raD8pqWF2s
— HT Sports (@HTSportsNews) August 9, 2017


