His 12 five-fors is easily the best; the next-best is seven, by Muralitharan and Shane Warne. His average of 18.08 is third among the 20 bowlers with 50-plus fourth-innings wickets; only Bishan Bedi and Curtly Ambrose have done better. And in terms of wickets, only Warne (138) has more fourth-innings wickets than Herath’s 115.

In first innings of Tests, Herath has averaged 36.48, which means his average in the last innings is half the first-innings number. In comparison, Muralitharan was clearly better in the first innings – he averaged 26.47 – but even he wasn’t as deadly in the fourth innings, averaging 21.01.Against the top eight teams in the period after Muralitharan’s retirement, Herath’s fourth-innings average dropped further to 17.70 compared to Muralitharan’s 20.43 against the top teams in the 2001-2010 period. Further, Herath’s strike rate of 43.8 was significantly better than Muralitharan’s 50.3 in this period.These numbers suggest that, in certain conditions, batsmen might have preferred facing Muralitharan to Herath. Can there be a bigger compliment than that for any spinner?

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