




“Only one team played in the spirit of the game, that’s all I can say.” Anil Kumble made this subtle, yet scathing attack against the Australians’ unsporting attitude by repeating the same line that Bill Woodfull, the former Australian skipper used in the 1932-33 Bodyline series against England.
Skipper Ricky Ponting led the way in on that front too. Ponting’s appeals on the field and his strong defence of his team’s approach clearly suggest that the Australian skipper, who sportingly denied taking a catch of Rahul Dravid on Day Two, was a mere aberration from his normal self.
“There’s no way I grounded that ball. If you’re actually questioning my integrity in the game, then you shouldn’t be standing there. You know what I did in the first innings. Doesn’t that explain the way I play the game?” asked Ponting.
No matter how fiercely the Australian skipper defended himself, his fate was sealed by the television replays that detailed the truth. Joining him in the ranks was his deputy Adam Gilchrist, very famous ly considered a honest walker, who straight away appealed twice for caught behind when there was no evidence clearly of the bat involved anyway. He got Rahul Dravid off Andrew Symonds though Gilchrist wasn’t too lucky against Dhoni.
Australia’s next skipper in the making is not totally unrelated to this school of thought either. Clarke waited for the umpire to give him out despite a big edge that went into second slip yesterday before claiming a Sourav Ganguly catch that clearly bounced before his hand. Ganguly stood his ground while Benson, keeping in mind the agreement between two skippers, asked Ponting who signaled out with a raised finger after consulting Clarke who indicated in the affirmative.
... contd.


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