NEW DELHI: The Indian fans, at the Oval, on Saturday booed the Australian team, especially
Cameron Green, after the Australian all-rounder's diving catch to dismiss opener Shubman Gill looked inconclusive to the naked eye.
Scott Boland, at the stroke of tea, got one to bounce little extra from length and it flew from ball the shoulder of Gill's blade only to be scooped up inches off the ground by a diving Green, stationed at gully.
Gill scored 18 in an opening stand of 41 and was looking in good rhythm.
As tea was called, a dejected Indian skipper Rohit Sharma was seen having a chat with on-field umpires while trudging back to pavilion.
Even a TV screen grab of the replay was tweeted from Gill's official social media handle in which the ball seemed to be touching the ground.
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WTC Final: Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane hold firm against Australia
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<p>Virat Kohli defied Australia on Day 4 to give India hope of an extraordinary win in what could be a grandstand finish to the World Test Championship final at The Oval. </p>
<p>India were 164/3 at stumps, still needing a further 280 runs to reach what would be a record-breaking total of 444 on the fifth and final day. </p>
<p>Kohli was 44 not out, while Ajinkya Rahane was unbeaten on 20 after he had already marked his first Test in over a year by top-scoring with 89 in India's first-innings 296. </p>
<p>India have won their last four series against Australia but a victory in south London might just surpass even those wins. </p>
<p>The scale of India's task was emphasised by the fact that only four teams in 146 years of Test cricket have made more than 400 to win in the fourth innings. </p>
<p>Australia need 7 more wickets to win the only major global men's trophy to have so far eluded them and ensure they head into next week's Ashes against England in buoyant mood. </p>
<p>India captain Rohit Sharma set the initial tone for a daunting chase with several boundaries, including a pulled six off Mitchell Starc. </p>
<p>But on the stroke of tea, Shubman Gill fell to a controversial catch when Cameron Green dived low to his left following an edge off Scott Boland. </p>
<p>Spin proved Rohit's undoing on a wearing pitch when he missed an attempted sweep against Nathan Lyon, bowling from around the wicket, falling LBW for 43. </p>
<p>India lost another wicket without adding another run when Cheteshwar Pujara attempted an extravagant upper-cut off Pat Cummins on 27 only to guide a simple catch to wicketkeeper Alex Carey. </p>
It was the second time in the game that Green took a screamer after Ajinkya Rahane's catch in first innings. Although replays suggested that it was a close call but some camera angles suggested that the ball was touching the grass.
"They (umpires) could have taken more time. They could have zoomed in. It is not normal match, it is a WTC final. Could have checked more," senior pacer Mohammed Shami said after the end of the day's play.
Former Australian coach Justin Langer, however, termed Green as an "honest bloke" who would never claim a dropped catch.
The soft signal, which was removed from the playing conditions ahead of the final, could have gone in India's favour if the on-field umpires had signalled it not-out to the TV umpire. The final call was with TV umpire Richard Kettleborough, who adjudged it as a fair catch.
Chants of "cheat cheat cheat" were heard soon after and were repeated when Green came on to bowl.
Gill was batting well and his partnership with Rohit Sharma had started to look threatening.
Former India spinner Harbhajan Singh, who is commentating on the game, felt the replays were inconclusive.
"The replay was inconclusive. They should have zoomed in on his fingers closely before taking the call. It could cost India dearly in the run chase," he told PTI.
Commentating on BBC, Langer felt Green had his giant fingers underneath the ball when he pulled off a one-hander screamer to his left at gully.
"The fingers were underneath the ball otherwise that ball would have snapped back. If you are Indian fan, it will be not out. If you are an Australian, it would be out. If you are an England fan, it will be not out. That is how I see it," said Langer in a lighter vein.
The tall all-rounder had dived to his right to take a stunning catch to dismiss Rahane in the first innings. Rahane made 89 in his first Test innings in 18 months.
(With inputs from PTI)