Bhajji backs Rohit Sharma in dissent row

Mumbai Indians off-spinner Harbhajan Singh has said his captain Rohit Sharma, who has been fined for showing dissent to the umpire, didn’t misbehave with the official and was only trying to clarify rules.

Published : Apr 25, 2017 13:25 IST , Mumbai

Mumbai Indians’ Rohit Sharma argues with the umpire over a ‘wide’ decision.
Mumbai Indians’ Rohit Sharma argues with the umpire over a ‘wide’ decision.
lightbox-info

Mumbai Indians’ Rohit Sharma argues with the umpire over a ‘wide’ decision.

Mumbai Indians off-spinner Harbhajan Singh has said his captain Rohit Sharma, who has been fined for showing dissent to the umpire, didn’t misbehave with the official and was only trying to clarify rules.

Sharma was at the crease when Mumbai needed 17 off the last over to win against Rising Pune Supergiant.

After losing Hardik Pandya in the first ball, Sharma hit a six in the second but Jaydev Unadkat pushed the third delivery wide after seeing Sharma shuffle across the stumps.

Rohit Sharma fined for dissent

Realising that the ball was veering away from the guideline for wide deliveries, Sharma left it alone. However, umpire S. Ravi didn’t call it a wide.

Disappointed with the decision, Sharma walked up to the umpire and protested even as the square-leg umpire A. Nand Kishore intervened. He was fined 50 per cent of his match fee after the incident.

“The ball was too far outside, to be honest, but I don’t really know whether it was wide or not,” Harbhajan told reporters at the post match conference.

“If both the batsman’s leg move, then bowler should get the margin, but Rohit’s one leg had moved and as per me it should have been a wide. But we have to move on with the umpire’s decision and they played better than us and it was great game of cricket.

“He (Rohit) wanted to check what is the rule then, where he need to stand, he did not shout at the umpire and asked him why did he not call a wide, he was asking where should I stand so that it is called a wide, if the bowl so outside, the more you move, the bowler will get the margin,” he explained.

Harbhajan also differed that because of that particular ball, the host and specially Sharma lost the momentum.

“I don’t know whether momentum was lost (because of the wide not being called), Rohit was hitting nicely but unfortunately he ended up hitting the ball straight in the air. That’s what happens, cricket is game, anything can happen,” he said.

“Just before that he hit a six and a similar ball went up in the air. I don’t think momentum would have lost, at that time (you need to do) as a batter, just see and hit the ball, Rohit was batting on 50 odd, so don’t think there were chances to lose the momentum,” he added.

Harbhajan, however, admitted that the 19th over of its innings bowled by Englishman Ben Stokes brought Pune back into contention.

Strokes, the costliest buy of this IPL, conceded only seven runs, and Mumbai eventually lost by three runs at the Wankhede stadium last night.

“That over was actually very crucial over for them. We didn’t get any boundary in that over. That over actually changed the scenario for them, they were in the game. 17 to win (in the final over), they were in the game,” Harbhajan said.

Milestone

The off spinner took his 200th T20 wicket last night.

“It is nice to be taking those 200 wickets and still going strong. It is nice to be achieving these milestones and my job is to keep playing,” said Harbhajan, who has been with Mumbai for past 10 years.

Harbhajan also backed out of sorts Sri Lankan seamer Lasith Malinga. “Mali has been a champion bowler for us, not just us but if you see his record in international career, he is champion bowler.

“He has gone for couple of overs, which can happen to any bowler. He is still the number one bowler in this format, no matter whether he is playing for us or Sri Lanka.

“It was his call that he needed a break and wanted to work something out for his own bowling.”

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment