Shoaib Akhtar comes to Virat Kohli’s defence

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The Australian media started calling Virat Kohli a clown for abusing debutant opener Sam Konstas on the first day of the Boxing Day Test. On the first day of the fourth Test match of the series being played in Melbourne yesterday, the Indian batter had a dispute with Australian opener Sam Konstas, who made his debut. At the start of the Test, the 19-year-old Australian opener Sam Konstas batted aggressively against Indian bowler Jasprit Bumrah while doing an extraordinary batting, on which the Indian fielders looked worried. At the end of the 10th over of the match, Virat Kohli and Sam Konstas collided shoulders, which was repeated between the two, but Usman Khawaja and the umpires intervened. After the incident, Virat Kohli was cautioned and fined only 20 per cent of the match fee and given one demerit point. After the incident went viral on social media, there are calls for Virat Kohli to be handed at least a one-match suspension. The Australian media called Kohli a 'clown' clown in Friday morning's newspapers. In the picture, the baby's feeder was also seen in his mouth. A newspaper called The West Australia published the headline of 'Kohli the clown', on which Indian supporters and fans were furious. On the other hand, in the post-day press conference, Sam Konstas called Virat Kohli's collision on the field a mistake, saying that he was adjusting his gloves, and he think Virat hit him by mistake.

Former star cricketer Shoaib Akhtar has come to Indian skipper Virat Kohli’s defence, saying that aggression has been a part and parcel of competitive cricket.

Kohli has come under criticism for his sledging and heated exchanges with his Australian counterpart Tim Paine during the tense second Test in Perth, which at one point needed the umpire to intervene.

It was reported that Kohli belittled Paine as just “a stand-in captain”, although India’s team management angrily denied he said it.

“Virat Kohli is one of the modern greats of the game. Aggression has been a part and parcel of competitive cricket, especially when you are playing Down Under as long as it stays in limit. Please cut him some slack,” Akhtar tweeted.

The “Rawalpindi Express” is no stranger to controversy. During the inaugural edition of the T20 World Cup in 2007, Akhtar was sent back from South Africa for assaulting team-mate Mohammad Asif with a bat in the dressing room.

But Akhtar is not the first cricketer to come to Kohli’s defence.

Former Australia captain Allan Border also said his antics might be over the top but the game needs characters who show passion.

“I haven’t seen anyone sort of carry on so much as a captain when his side takes a wicket,” he said in a Fox Sports podcast Thursday. “It’s really over the top but it’s good in a way. You can see some passion about what he’s trying to do.