Indian fast bowler Mohammed Siraj has raised the temperature of the Border-Gavaskar bout to boiling point by accusing Travis Head of lying about their exchange at the end of the Australian batter’s century on day two in Adelaide.
In a Hindi interview with Harbhajan Singh on the Indian broadcaster Star, Siraj said that Head used “abusive words” after his dismissal and claimed he did not hear the Australian first say “well bowled”.
“I was enjoying bowling to him, it was a good battle. He batted really well. At the end of the day, as a bowler when he hits you for six off your good balls, something stirs in the blood, inside you – the passion rises,” Siraj told Star in a translation provided by ESPNcricinfo.
“My celebration after bowling him – I was just celebrating, but his abusive reaction can be seen on television. If you see, at the start I didn’t say a word – I was just celebrating only initially.
“Later, at the press conference, he said wrong things – he claimed he said ‘well bowled’ to me. But that’s a lie. There was no ‘well bowled’ that I could see. And he talked about respect. I mean, we respect everyone. We don’t disrespect. I always have respected people as cricket is a gentleman’s game. But what he did wasn’t right. I didn’t like it at all.”
Head’s account of the exchange, which appeared to be backed up by broadcast footage, was that he first said “well bowled” jokingly to Siraj before “biting back” with sharper words after the bowler indicated the way to the dressing room.
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“I actually jokingly said, ‘Well bowled’. Then when he pointed me [towards] the sheds, I had my reaction as well,” Head told reporters. “I feel like the way I play the game, I would like a better reaction. I was surprised at the reaction … there was no confrontation leading up to it.
“I felt like it was probably, yeah, a little bit far at the time, and that’s why I’m disappointed in the reaction that I gave back. But I’m also going to stand up for myself. I’d like to think in our team that we wouldn’t do that.