Opinion| Virat Kohli is a modern great\, he needn\'t be loutish

Opinion| Virat Kohli is a modern great, he needn’t be loutish

The Indian cricket captain’s behaviour is disrespectful towards his opponents. Worse, it disrespects the game.

editorials Updated: Dec 20, 2018 09:50 IST
India's captain Virat Kohli (C) and Australia's captain Tim Paine react after Paine ran a single during play on day four of the second test match between Australia and India at Perth Stadium in Perth, Australia, December 17 (REUTERS)

The actor, Naseeruddin Shah, has articulated what many Indian cricket fans have been thinking: Virat Kohli is the world’s worst behaved player. “His cricketing brilliance pales beside his arrogance and bad manners,” Shah wrote on Facebook on Monday. This is not new for Kohli. Even before he made his name as a cricketer on the senior circuit, he had made a name for himself as a boorish, bratty lout of a teenager.

That nasty streak, kept somewhat in check when he was a young player in a team peopled by colossuses such as Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid (players whose batsmanship was the sole sign of machismo and competitiveness), has been afforded free expression as Kohli has zoomed upwards in the echelons of the modern game. And it has come to define his on field presence as he has assumed captaincy, been offered the unstinted support of his coach, Ravi Shastri, and swiftly become the single most powerful man in Indian cricket. Moreover, he has tried to fashion the team in his image.

Aggression on the field, in terms of play, is no bad thing. But unwarranted aggression in terms of personal conduct goes by another name: loutishness. It is also, in Kohli’s case, exacerbated by a sense of entitlement and arrogance that he exhibits at press conferences. Especially over the past few years (coinciding with the strengthening of his position as Indian cricket’s sole centre of power), Kohli has repeatedly behaved in ways that are unbecoming of an India cricket captain, of a man who happens to be an important ambassador of the country.

It is a pity. He really does not need to do this. He is a modern great; his batting speaks for itself; and Kohli gains little by saying and doing things that gain him few admirers. There have been aggressive captains in the history of the game (including our own Sourav Ganguly). But none of them have disrespected their opponents. Kohli’s behaviour is disrespectful towards his opponents. Worse, it disrespects the game.

First Published: Dec 20, 2018 07:26 IST