Batting great Sunil Gavaskar was not all impressed with Mohammed Siraj’s animated gesture towards Travis Head after getting him out on Day 2 of the 2nd Test match in Adelaide. Head, who played a magnificent 140-run knock, was dismissed by Siraj courtesy of a brilliant yorker as the Indian paceman got fired up and gave him a send-off by gesturing towards him to walk back. The Aussie star also didn’t hold back and had an exchange with him. After the incident, Siraj faced the heat from fans and was booed by the record 50,000-plus Adelaide crowd.
Gavaskar asserted that Siraj’s gesture of giving a send-off to a player who scored 140 runs was unnecessary.
“Unnecessary, if you ask me, the man’s got 140, he hasn’t got four or five or something. He got 140, you’re giving him a send-off, that’s totally uncalled for,” Gavaskar said during the tea-time show on Star Sports.
Head single-handedly dominated the Indian bowlers with his counter-attacking approach, as his knock was laced with 17 fours and 4 sixes. He helped Australia secure a commanding 157-run first-innings lead as they posted 337 in reply to India’s 180.
Siraj had a chance to send Head back to the pavilion early on 76, but he dropped a tricky catch off Ravichandran Ashwin’s delivery.
Gavaskar was not surprised by the reaction Siraj got from the home crowd after his verbal exchange with Head and said that he had a chance to become hero if he had applauded the batter for his knock but it went other way round.
“No wonder he’s getting the stick from the crowd. Travis Head is a local hero and after scoring 100, if he had even just applauded, Siraj would have been a hero for the entire crowd. Instead by giving him a send-off, he’s become the villain,” he added.
Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting suggested that Siraj got a bit frustrated after getting a six by Head on a ball before that.
“Siraj wasn’t happy to be clipped over deep backward square for six,” Ponting said on Channel Seven’s coverage.
“Have a look at Travis Head’s reaction … it was almost like he [Siraj] lost it halfway down. He might have a bit to answer for there as well. That’s what you call the old-fashioned send-off. Umpires and referees don’t see kindly to stuff like that.”
Inzamam-ul-Haq, left, and Misbah-ul-Haq (Agency Photos) The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Friday announced the names of latest inductees into the prestigious
One-day cricket is the go-to game for Rohit Sharma. (Photo by Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP via Getty Images) NEW DELHI: From the high of winning the T20 World Cup in
Former India batter Robin Uthappa has claimed that cricket has the highest suicide rate among all global sports. Uthappa, who has himself dealt wit
Rishabh Pant came in for a lot of criticism for his poor shot-selection during crucial times in the recently-concluded Border Gavaskar Trophy series in Austra