Kohli slams Aussie crickets after Test match victory

India's cricket captain Virat Kohli (left) and Ajinkya Rahane (right) receive the Border -Gavaskar tropy from Sunil Gavaskar during the fourth day of their fourth and final cricket Test match against Australia at The Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium in Dharamsala on March 28, 2017. PHOTO | PRAKASH SINGH |

What you need to know:

  • Kohli, who remarked on his friendship with some Australian players before the series, said things had changed during the bitter contest between the world's top two sides.
  • The 28-year-old skipper sat out the final Test due to injury.
  • Kohli caused a furore in the second Test after accusing his counterpart Steven Smith of repeatedly abusing the decision review system.
  • Critics questioned Kohli's conduct under pressure, and also his form in the series, with the right-hander scoring just 46 runs from five innings.

DHARAMSALA

Indian skipper Virat Kohli said he no longer considered Australian cricketers as friends after winning a tense Test series marked by bad blood in Dharamsala on Tuesday.

Kohli, who remarked on his friendship with some Australian players before the series, said things had changed during the bitter contest between the world's top two sides.

"I thought that was the case but it has changed for sure. As I said in the heat of the battle, you want to be competitive but yeah I have been proven wrong," he said in a post-match press conference.

"The thing I said before the first Test, I have certainly been proven wrong, and you won't hear me say that ever again."

The 28-year-old skipper, who sat out the final Test due to injury, caused a furore in the second Test after accusing his counterpart Steven Smith of repeatedly abusing the decision review system.

Critics questioned Kohli's conduct under pressure, and also his form in the series, with the right-hander scoring just 46 runs from five innings.

Tensions were exacerbated after the Indian captain was dubbed "the Donald Trump of sport" in an Australian newspaper, and former Test bowler Geoff Lawson accused him of acting like "your worst behaved player".

Indian newspapers blasted Australia's media for waging a relentless "hate campaign" throughout the series.

The rancour was inflamed in the third Test in Ranchi, where Australia batted out the fifth day for a draw, when Glenn Maxwell mocked Kohli's shoulder injury.

SMITH APOLOGISES

The animosity between the sides spilled over into the series-decider with Ravindra Jadeja and Aussie wicketkeeper Matthew Wade engaging in a verbal fight Monday that was caught by stump microphones.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) posted the footage, complete with stump microphone recordings, on its website and social media channels.

India's Murali Vijay then found himself at the centre of a fresh controversy after claiming a catch that replays showed had spilled onto the grass.

TV footage caught Smith fuming angrily in the dressing room and appearing to call Vijay a "f****** cheat".

The Aussie skipper apologised for his outburst but expressed disappointment that the on-field spat between Wade and Jadeja was made public by the BCCI.

"I have been pretty intense throughout this series. I really wanted to do well for the team. At times I have been in my own bubble and have let my emotions slip. I apologise for that," said Smith.

"I was a little bit disappointed that the BCCI sieved through the archive to find a conversation out on the field that was happening between Matty (Wade) and Jadeja.

"It's happened between both sides throughout this series, so the fact they've done that to us is a little bit disappointing.

"Usually what's said on the field should stay on the field."