Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Australia cannot throw stones at India, says Chappell

- Siddharth Vishwanath­an sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

The current India vs Australia series has witnessed plenty of sparks. The controvers­y surroundin­g the DRS row involving Steve Smith and Virat Kohli in the Bangalore Test set the tone of hostility. Before this, there was Kohli’s toilet gags against Matt Renshaw and Ishant Sharma making monkey faces

After the Bangalore Test, there were attacks by the Australian media on Kohli, right from comparing him with animals to the pitch preparatio­n in Ranchi.

Ian Chappell, writing in Wide World of Sports, has stated that a lot of bad blood has existed between the two countries because of the intense cricket that they have played. However, he has criticised the cricket administra­tors for being too lax while dealing with the issue of sledging.

“Administra­tors are foolish if they’re going to allow all this talking to continue on the field. It’s been allowed to escalate over the years, and nobody is stepping in to stop it. It’s going to cause a huge problem one day on the field,” Ian Chappell wrote.

The former Australia skipper has said Australia are in no position to complain about the current state of things. “I also don’t think the Australian­s are in any position to start throwing stones. They’re no choirboys themselves. It’s ridiculous to allow that much chatter to occur on the field.”

The BCCI posted a video on their Twitter handle which saw Cheteshwar Pujara and Ravichandr­an Ashwin slege David Warner for his poor form. To this, Warner stated that it was just banter and that he would not respond to the ‘sledging’.

Chappell added that if teams wait for the ICC to step in and do something about the issue of sledging, then nothing will ever happen. “You’ve got all sorts of other people there and yet nothing is done. Administra­tors don’t understand the game properly and they’ve been really lax in a lot of those areas. It’s time they smartened up.”

Chappell also stated that if there is one criticism of Kohli, it is that he is a very emotional person. “I’ve always thought as a captain that it’s best if you keep your display of emotions pretty even, but Kohli doesn’t. To say he’s worse than somebody else is unfair as everyone does it, and some blokes do it differentl­y to Kohli.

 ?? PTI ?? Steve Smith (left) and Virat Kohli greet each other in Pune.
PTI Steve Smith (left) and Virat Kohli greet each other in Pune.

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