India Defeat Greeted With Furious Headlines: Dock Wages! Sack Dhoni! Even Politicians Mock Team
India suffered a hattrick of Test defeats versus England. At Old Trafford and the Oval, India lost by an innings and inside three days to lose the five-Test series 3-1.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: August 18, 2014 05:27 PM IST
India's spectacular series defeat against England set off a flood of angry criticism on Monday, with some fans calling for captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni to go and others saying players should forfeit their wages. India's politicians, too, joined the bandwagon.
Sunday's innings and 244-run defeat in the fifth Test at The Oval saw England take the five-match series 3-1, marking yet another crushing away loss for Dhoni's men. (Don't Blame IPL: Dhoni)
"Spineless India blown away," read the Hindustan Times daily's front-page headline.
"If Indian fans had thought nothing could be worse than the 0-4 Test series rout they suffered in England in 2011, they were in for a surprise on Sunday." (India's Jelly-Like Resistance Embarrassing: Gavaskar)
India's top politicians -- usually the first to congratulate the country's cricketers -- joined the masses on social media to mock the team's performance.
"The first people to take (prime minister) Modi's speech seriously is the Indian cricket team. Their runs will now only be Made in India," tweeted veteran politician Digvijaya Singh, referring to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's recent call to strengthen the country's manufacturing sector.
My daughter sent me- The first people to take Modi's speech seriously is the Indian cricket team.Their runs will now only be Made in India!
- digvijaya singh (@digvijaya_28) August 18, 2014
India's leading cricket writer Ayaz Memon tweeted that the defeat was "worse than a whitewash of an ageing team", calling it the "disintegration of a side that held out so much promise for the future".
The Mail Today newspaper, under the headline "Disastrous duo must go," demanded that India's World Cup-winning captain and coach Duncan Fletcher be sacked after a run of poor Test performances outside the country.
The Times of India went a step further, demanding that the country's "pampered and highly paid" cricketers give up their substantial pay packets. (How Divine Intervention Didn't Save India at The Oval)
"At the very least, they should be made to forfeit their wages for their embarrassingly inept performances in the last three Tests," it said, suggesting the money could instead be given to the women's team.