India’s cricket chiefs plan to speak to national coach Greg Chappell over a rude gesture he reportedly made to crowds in Kolkata last week, an official said on Monday.
”We will certainly discuss the matter at the board’s annual general meeting in Kolkata on Tuesday,” said Inderjit Bindra, former head of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).
”I don’t think any action will be taken but we will tell him such a thing should not happen in future.”
TV clippings showed Chappell putting his right hand out of a window of the team bus and pointing a middle finger towards the crowds outside the Eden Gardens on Thursday, a day prior to the fourth one-dayer against South Africa.
Newspapers slammed the former Australian captain for what they said was an insulting gesture to fans who were taunting Chappell for excluding local hero Sourav Ganguly from the one-day side.
Team spokesperson M Baladitya said ”Chappell had injured his finger during practice and he said he was just attending to it. He did not gesture at anybody.”
It was an explanation few were willing to buy, but Chappell insisted he had done nothing wrong.
”I see no reason to keep defending myself for something I have not done,” he was quoted as saying in Monday’s Times of India newspaper.
”If I want to point a finger at someone, I would point it openly, not when I am inside a bus.”
The same newspaper commented: ”Indian fans might be a tad too emotional for Chappell’s tastes. But they don’t deserve such disrespect.
”By his extravagantly tasteless gesture, the legendary Australian cricketer has virtually guaranteed that the debate would now be on him rather than the overtly sentimental crowd.”
Rahul Dravid’s Indian team was jeered off the field after South Africa thrashed the hosts by 10 wickets on Friday to take a 2-1 lead in the series.
Many in the 90 000-strong crowd taunted the Indians during and after the match and raised slogans against Chappell and the selectors.
Ganguly, India’s most successful Test captain with 21 wins, was sacked and replaced by Dravid this season following a public spat with Chappell.
The 33-year-old left-hander was not picked for the home one-day series against Sri Lanka and South Africa, but has been named in the team for the first Test against the Sri Lankans in Chennai from December 2.
India must win the final one-dayer against South Africa in Mumbai later on Monday to draw the series.
Chappell (56) was appointed India’s coach in June for a two-year term till the 2007 World Cup in the Caribbean. – AFP