The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Smith and Kohli escape charges

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Bangalore: Australia captain Steve Smith and his India counterpar­t Virat Kohli have escaped any charges after a controvers­ial Decision Review System (DRS) incident in this week's Bengaluru test, the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) said on Wednesday.

Following India's 75-run win in the second Test, Kohli accused Smith of 'crossing the line' and said the Australian­s repeatedly looked towards their dressing room for assistance over whether to ask for a review of the umpire's decision using DRS.

Players are not allowed to seek direction on reviews apart from conferring with the non-striker. Teams cannot make more than two unsuccessf­ul review requests per 80 overs.

Smith, who sought help after being judged leg before wicket off Umesh Yadav, said it was a one-off incident caused by "brain fade" but Kohli countered that it was not the first time it had happened and that he had complained to the match officials.

Kohli's public criticism of the visitors could have also been considered a breach of ICC code of conduct.

"In relation to Steve Smith and Virat Kohli, the ICC has considered both incidents in the context of this match and concluded it will be taking no further action against either player," the governing body said in a statement.

The third test between the teams starts in Ranchi on March 16 with the series level at 1-1. "Ahead of (the third test), the match referee will bring both captains together to remind them of their responsibi­lities to the game," ICC chief executive David Richardson said.

However, in ICC'S rule book, there's no clear mention of censure in such a situation. Neither does it entail to any breach of conduct. The rule says the umpires can only dock them off a review. Hence, a lucky escape for Smith.

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