Virat Kohli's sledging has lit the fuse on this series

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

The first eight days of this series were remarkably peaceful given the animosity of recent encounters between India and Australia. Now, Virat Kohli’s incessant sledging has lit the fuse.

Tim Paine has been adamant he wants his team to leave behind the belligerence and boorishness which has, at times, tarnished their performances in the modern era.

Paine’s charges have followed his lead. Since he took over for the fourth Test in South Africa in March, there has not been a single unsavoury incident instigated by an Australian player in 25 matches across all formats.

Until the Perth Test, that is.

On day four of this match, the Australian hounds were let loose once more, their captain having unlocked the cage in response to Kohli’s churlish antics.

While the home side played the unfamiliar role of Nice Guys until this point, Kohli was having none of it. Clearly, he wanted the series to be played with the acrimony of past battles.

That much was clear when, as India secured their first wicket of the series, Kohli furiously screamed “F— off” at the dismissed Aaron Finch. The Aussies did not return fire when Kohli failed in both innings in that match, resisting the urge to give him a send-off.

While Kohli typically is a sketch of calm when batting, in the field he is far less in control of his emotions. This was writ large over five days in Perth.

When Peter Handscomb took a slips catch to dismiss the touring skipper on day three, the Indian batsman immediately turned around and gave the cordon a mouthful – as if Handscomb was wrong to claim the catch.

Later that day, Kohli celebrated and laughed in animated fashion when Finch was struck on the finger, seeing him retire hurt.

Soon after, when Shaun Marsh was dismissed, Kohli gestured repeatedly towards the Perth crowd and gave them a foul-mouthed spray. Then he zeroed in on incoming batsman Travis Head, sledging him as he walked out to bat, as he marked out his guard, and throughout his innings of 19.

That wicket brought to the crease Paine, whom Kohli was so emotionally invested in sledging that he moved himself to mid-off in the first session of day four, apparently so he could get stuck into the opposite captain from close range.

Virat Kohli (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

For the first time during his reign as captain, the mild-mannered Paine bit back. The clash continued throughout Paine’s pivotal knock of 37 from 116 balls, and resumed when Kohli came out to bat in the fourth innings.

By that stage the Aussie bowlers and fieldsmen were already running their mouths in a manner we hadn’t seen for nine months.

Mitchell Starc was following bouncers with barbs, Nathan Lyon was yakking at incoming batsmen, and fieldsman Travis Head screamed a celebration at Ajinkya Rahane from silly mid-off.

At no stage was Paine shown trying to reel in his players. It seems he believed Kohli’s behaviour justified their aggression. Ironically, it was the persistent hostility of Australian players – paricularly renowned sledgers David Warner and Mitchell Johnson – which first riled Kohli as a youngster, seemingly fuelling him ever since.

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Never have I seen a Test captain behave with the constant, wild hostility displayed by Kohli during Australia’s Tests in India last year, when he continually gave huge send-offs. Plenty of cricketers have outbursts, but these are occasional incidents rather than the norm.

Most of the time, players delivering send-offs are bowlers who have just won a battle with the batsman and are surging with adrenaline. It is bizarre, though, when a fieldsman like Warner or Kohli decides to charge in to give a spray.

Kohli did just that over and again versus Australia last year, and not just at renowned loudmouths like Warner and Matthew Wade, but even at quiet, reserved cricketers such as Matt Renshaw and Shaun Marsh.

I can’t help but think that Kohli’s rage towards the Australian team is affecting his performance. He has averaged just 24 with the bat over his past two Test series against them, with just one score higher than 34 from his nine innings.

That one knock was the phenomenal 123 he scored in the first innings at Perth. Skill. Courage. Determination. Composure. There is a long list of adjectives necessary to describe that innings. It was the among the best I have ever seen by a visiting batsman in Australia.

But, in the same way Australia have often marred their achievements with their coarse behaviour, Kohli’s sledging has taken the focus away from this remarkable performance.

The Crowd Says:

2018-12-22T11:21:53+00:00

Rajiv Chowta

Guest


That Australian's have traditionally been sledgers that cry like babies when it hits them is well known and accepted by the cricket community overall. That is going to change as Australia matures and that is awesome. Sadly, India has lost the plot. Once gentleman who were toilers and held back and played around by a corrupt board, they have now increasingly taken pages from Australias disgusting past. Kohli is a great bartter but his ego and behaviour is atrocious. That he has so much power makes it even worse. In 5-10 years India will go through a crisis like Australias. I can only wait as it will finally smash the idocy of a one sport obsession in India and also bring back the humility.

2018-12-21T15:05:17+00:00

CUW

Roar Rookie


yessss at the end of the day India is the richest power in cricket and money buys u teflon :) just the other day Sri lanka pacy got a demerit point for saying the same words against NZ. but u cannot touch Kohli. at least in his country people are losing admiration of him - he is not held in the same class as Tendulkar kapil dev or gaveskar.

2018-12-21T09:48:51+00:00

Sudden

Guest


That's the thing though... both sides have ardently started there hasn't been anything personal so far... In your zeal to paint him black irrespective, you just have contrived to spin the whole thing beyond the realm of facts... Or are you trying to say that Paine is lying?

2018-12-21T00:11:29+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Murdoch has far more integrity than the BCCI. I hope that hurts.

2018-12-20T08:51:11+00:00

Zavjalova

Roar Rookie


I think a lot of aussie fans are being snowflakes about india's sledging. I mean come on... we been sledging teams for as long as i can remember. The comments here highlight the double standards

2018-12-20T04:30:30+00:00

Dr Funkytown

Roar Rookie


Absolutely agree, didnt berate or swear at Kohli just quipped back,

2018-12-20T04:28:38+00:00

Dr Funkytown

Roar Rookie


Doug, wasn't it similar last tour, except they played the GABBA and gave requested (directed) not to play at the WACA

2018-12-20T04:26:33+00:00

Dr Funkytown

Roar Rookie


Thats a pretty long bow to draw

2018-12-20T04:25:40+00:00

Dr Funkytown

Roar Rookie


Very convenient BCCI claim this as baseless without outlining what was said. At the same time, good on Paine for not buying into bring whats said on the field into the public arena. Pressure on Kohli and BCCI to perform as #1 against Aussies when they are under strength, under siege and high scrutinized from all aspects

2018-12-20T02:12:16+00:00

Aditya

Guest


I’m pretty sure I’m not believing some news.com.au tabloid run by Murdoch, that’s for sure.

2018-12-20T02:10:31+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


Absolutely! Just like H Singh never called Roy a "monkey". And Tendulkar never lifted the seam.

2018-12-20T02:03:20+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


Joking around telling a woman not to blush. Such a bad person. Only in Australia would he have "burned all his bridges". What a prudish nation. I bet Steve Smith, Dave Warner, Cameron Bancroft are offered BBL contracts when they finishing serving their punishment for cheating.

2018-12-19T23:36:40+00:00

Essa

Guest


Yeah the BCCI issued a press release putting that to bed. So nothing to see there.

2018-12-19T22:48:16+00:00

Aditya

Guest


That line is just complete rubbish fake news from the Australian media. Kohli never said that.

2018-12-19T22:14:57+00:00

Peter

Roar Rookie


Fair enough. He's one of the best players in the world. I'd prefer arrogance to false humility I suppose.

2018-12-19T21:15:57+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


They probably realised that if the South Africans can successfully appeal Rabada's shoulder bump on Smith, that there would be no chance of getting anything to stick against the BCCI for Kohli, so why bother.

2018-12-19T13:48:30+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Gayle was never banished. He just burnt all his bridges. No one wants to be in his company...so they didn't offer him a contract. Chris Gayle is a lot like you, anon. He is unpleasant and not one person values anything he has to offer.

2018-12-19T13:44:29+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


What do you think you mean with the 'tin-foil hat' bit. I'll guarantee you misunderstand it.

2018-12-19T13:41:26+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


He's the best batsman (against teams other than Australia) but he is not the best cricketer. Bowlers are usually the best...they win games.

2018-12-19T13:37:35+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The umpires had to act. They didn't. On-field officiating is cricket's biggest issue.

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