The Australians are congenital cheats and liars and would stoop to any level to win the game. The term - gentlemen/s game - does not apply when they are playing cricket. There have been innumerable times when they have claimed dropped catches, and still try to do so even with the DRS on. See how fast their coach and retired players jumped in to support this wrong action by Smith. AND how fast the Australians want to move on. Would they have agreed to do so if a cricketer from any other country, especially from a non-white country, had done what Smith did? They would only have rested after having extracted their pound of flesh. That particular cricketer would have been fined about 80 percent of his match fee and been made to sit out the next two tests. But then being white has its priviledges. Sunil Gavaskar rightly said that Broad was anti-Indian.
Aussie,a country of ex convicts can not get out of the habbit of foul mouthing,thinking I am more right than you and finding fault on others.If by chance virat would have done the same mistake what Smith did,then every son of the ex convicts country would have trolled kholi citing their gentlemanly game etc.So forget what they say.
Aussie,a country of ex convicts can not get out of the habbit of foul mouthing,thinking I am more right than you and finding fault on others.If by chance virat would have done the same mistake what Smith did,then every son of the ex convicts country would have trolled kholi citing their gentlemanly game etc.So forget what they say.
Re: LET GO, SMITH...
by Sunil Bhandari on Mar 15, 2017 05:15 PM
Why do a literal translation- this saying means instead of police (or a person who normally does no wrong) berating a thief(or a habitual wrongdoer) , in this situation a thief is berating the policeman