Virat Kohli to miss Sydney Test against Australia after shoulder bump with Sam Konstas at MCG? What does ICC rule say

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Virat Kohli might land himself in trouble after his deliberate shoulder bump with Australian debutant Sam Konstas grabbed the limelight on the opening day of the fourth Test in the ongoing Border-Gavaskar Trophy (BGT) at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) on Thursday.

The incident took place during the break between the 10th and 11th over of the Australian innings after the hosts won the toss and chose to bat first.

Sam Konstas and his opening partner Usman Khawaja were changing ends when Kohli bumped his shoulder with the 19-year-old while walking. The right-handed debutant hit back at the Indian stalwart verbally before Khawaja intervened to separate the two.

Replays showed Kohli was fully aware of where he was walking and deliberately bumped his shoulder with Konstas to play mind games with the latter. Even former Australia captain Ricky Ponting remarked on Kohli's intentional shoulder-bumping on air.

According to the ICC rulebook, “making inappropriate and deliberate physical contact with another player” is a Level 2 offence under chapter 42.1 of the MCC laws – Unacceptable Conduct.

If the on-field umpires believe that Kohli's action was deliberate, they will report to the match referee. Upon properly examining the matter, the match referee will make a final decision.

Provided the umpires and the match referee agree that Kohli's contact was intentional, the former India captain might face strict sanctions from the International Cricket Council (ICC).

Ravindra Jadeja finally dismissed Konstas after scoring a quick-fire fifty on debut. The right-hander scored 60 off 65 balls, including six fours and two sixes, coming off Jasprit Bumrah.

Konstas scored 16 runs off Bumrah's fourth over as he smashed two fours and a maximum. It was the first six the Indian pacer conceded in Test cricket in nearly four years.

Will Virat Kohli miss Sydney Test? Level 2 offences carry a penalty of three to four demerit points, with corresponding punishments as follows:

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