Kohli engineered Kumble's exit, leaked email suggests


PERTH: India's cricket captain Virat Kohli (R) shares a lighter moment with teammate Rishabh Pant (L) during a training session in Perth yesterday. India take on Australia in the second cricket Test match starting tomorrow in Perth. - AFP

MELBOURNE: India are treating their pace bowlers like prize-winning thoroughbreds after the series-opening win over Australia in Adelaide while cautioning them against straining too hard at the reins when the second match gets underway in Perth.


Ishant Sharma, Mohammed Shami and Jasprit Bumrah took 14 of 20 wickets at Adelaide Oval in a fine debut as a pace trio on Australian soil that helped fire the tourists to a 31-run win on Monday.


Former England captain Michael Vaughan wrote on Twitter that India skipper Virat Kohli and actress wife Anushka Sharma had given up their business class seats to two of the quicks for the 3.5 hour flight from Adelaide to Perth on Tuesday.


India coach Ravi Shastri said all three were being spared net duties on Tuesday in a bid to freshen up before day one of the second Test starting at Perth Stadium tomorrow. "I think fast bowlers are a precious commodity and they need to be taken care of like what you do with a racehorse," India bowling coach Bharat Arun told reporters in Perth yesterday.
"And that's exactly what's happening."


Friday's test will be the first played at the new Perth Stadium, which has a drop-in pitch and succeeded the WACA as the city's premier venue for internationals. Perth Stadium curator Brett Sipthorpe is keen to produce a fast, bouncy wicket that would not be out of place at the WACA.
Arun said India's bowlers would welcome that prospect following the relatively unhelpful track served up at Adelaide. "Definitely with a little help from the wicket, obviously the bowlers would love that sort of a wicket," he said.


"Again, whatever is in the offing, we are happy with it." However, he said he would urge his bowlers to stick to the same recipe that brought success in Adelaide-consistency and sustained pressure.
"You can be carried away with the extra pace and bounce but again you need to understand that on any responsive track, what is really going to be successful is your consistency," he said.


"And that's exactly what we're going to work with the bowlers." While the quicks were akin to racehorses, Arun likened spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, who took six wickets and bowled a huge load at Adelaide, to a fine wine.


"Spinners mature a lot with age, maybe they're like wine," he said. "He helped us gain control. He gave us the control, bowling close to 90 overs for 147 runs and six wickets, you can't ask for better."
Meanwhile, the acrimonious exit of India's cricket coach last year was given a fresh twist yesterday as a leaked email suggested captain Virat Kohli had "frequently" worked behind the scenes against him.


Former coach Anil Kumble quit over a rift with Kohli in June 2017, saying his relationship with the skipper was "untenable". The Board of Control for Cricket in India has denied any division in the Indian camp.
But in a leaked email seen by AFP, a senior BCCI official wrote to board administrator Vinod Rai that Kohli "frequently sent SMSs to the CEO on which you acted and there was a change in the coach".


"Mr Kumble a legend in his own right was subjected to loss of face and made to look like a villain," added senior administrator Diana Edulji. "He was gracious enough to move on for which I respect him. There also, rules were broken and I had raised objections back then."


Edulji's email originated from a separate controversy in the women's national team, where former coach Ramesh Powar fell out with one-day captain Mithali Raj. As men's national team coach, Kumble helped India reclaim the number-one Test ranking and maintained an unblemished record in five Test series.
But he resigned after his one-year term ended with a humiliating defeat to Pakistan in the 50-over Champions Trophy in June 2017, prompting a fallout with Kohli who reportedly didn't like the coach's training techniques.
He was replaced by Ravi Shastri. Shastri was always the frontrunner for the job with pundits pointing to his time as India's team director from 2014-16 and warm relationship with Kohli. Kohli, currently on tour in Australia, was yet to comment publicly on the leaked email. - AFP