The Phnom Penh Post

Calls grow for calm in India tour

- Tim Collings

ALEADING Indian commentato­r has hit out at the “toxicity” blighting the series against Australia, and called for both sides to show restraint before the winner-takes-all final Test begins on Saturday.

Harsha Bhogle fears that the glorificat­ion of aggressive on-field behaviour by media on both sides and passions boiling over could harm Test cricket’s reputation with the series on a knife-edge at 1-1.

The latest barbs have seen India skipper Virat Kohli dubbed “the Donald Trump of sport” in one Australian newspaper and former Test bowler Geoff Lawson accusing Kohli of acting like “your worst behaved player”.

India’s newspapers fired back with the Hindustan Times accusing Australian media of a relentless “hate campaign” throughout the series.

“Friends in Australia tell me they are perturbed by the toxicity this series has generated. Cricket lovers in India saying so too,” Bhogle said on Twitter.

“If we have to use toxicity and divisivene­ss to spread our game, we are using a short-term approach that can only be harmful,” added the veteran Indian TV cricket analyst.

“I am particular­ly perturbed by the fact that some of us in the media are promoting this divisivene­ss and taking sides to spread ill-will.”

Tensions have been ramped up since Kohli stopped just short of accusing Australian captain Steve Smith of cheating in the aftermath of the second Test in Bangalore, which India won to level the series at 1-1.

The Indian captain was furious at opposite number Smith for seek ing guidance from the dressing room over his dismissa l, something t he r ules forbid.

The umpires had to cool the players down after Kohli was enraged by Smith looking over to his backroom staff as he decided whether or not to go for a review after being ruled out lbw off Umesh Yadav following a low delivery.

“We take our decisions on the field ourselves. We don’t ask for confirmati­on from upstairs,” fumed Kohli, stopping short of calling the Austra- lians cheats but implying it. “I saw that happening two times when I was batting out there. I pointed that out to the umpire as well that I have seen their players looking upstairs for confirmati­on.

“And that’s why the umpire was at him. When he turned back the umpire knew exactly what was going on. We observed that, we told match referee and the umpire that it’s been happening for the last three days and it has to stop.”

Rancour inflamed

The rancour was inflamed in the drawn third Test in Ranchi as Australia batted out the fifth day for a draw and allrounder Glenn Maxwell was accused of mocking Kohli’s shoulder injury.

Now the Daily Telegraph newspaper says Kohli is behaving like a bully and accused the Indian cricket board and match officials of letting him get away it. “Kohli has become the Donald Trump of world sport,” Ben Horne wrote in his Telegraph column.

“The Indian captain is a law unto himself with no one – not even the ICC or his own board – holding him accountabl­e for his continual perpetuati­on of fake news.”

Horne was referring to the assertion from Kohli, without offering evidence, that Smith’s look up to the dressing room for guidance in Bangalore over whether to review an lbw decision was not a one-off.

The ICC brought Smith and Kohli together for a clear-the-air meeting after that Test, where Smith claimed the incident was a “brain fade”.

And Lawson slated the Indian skipper for not displaying enough maturity. “As a leader and as a captain of a cricket team where you’ve got lots of responsibi­lities, you’ve got to show more gravitas and responsibi­lity than this,” he told Fox Sports. “These sorts of actions are those of your worst behaved player.

Bhogle said it was time the media stopped fanning the flames before lasting damage was done to Test cricket.

“A lot of us entered this profession because we love sport and had the opportunit­y to talk/write about it. We didn’t enter to spread toxicity,” he tweeted.

 ?? MANJUNATH KIRAN/AFP ?? Indian captain Virat Kohli (left) celebrates the dismissal of Australia batsman Mitchell Marsh (right) on the second day of the second Test on March 5.
MANJUNATH KIRAN/AFP Indian captain Virat Kohli (left) celebrates the dismissal of Australia batsman Mitchell Marsh (right) on the second day of the second Test on March 5.

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