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Inzamam-ul-Haq criticizes Jimmy Anderson over uncharitable comments on Virat Kohli

Inzamam, who has played against some of the best Indian players ever, held high praise for Kohli.

Inzamam-ul-Haq criticizes Jimmy Anderson over uncharitable comments on Virat Kohli

New Delhi: Jimmy Anderson's controversial comments on apparent 'technical flaws' in Virat Kohli's batting has sparked a reaction from cricketing personalities all across the globe.

After Graeme Smith questioned Anderson's comments on twitter, now Pakistan chief selector Inzamam-ul-Haq has criticised James Anderson for his uncharitable words questioning the Indian skipper's capabilities.

Anderson had recently said Kohli's technical deficiencies were not at display during the ongoing Test series between India and England because the pitches in India are devoid of bounce and there is lack of movement.

"It is surprising to me that Anderson should question Kohli's runs and ability because I haven't seen him take too many wickets in India," Inzamam said on the Geo Super sports channel here last night.

"Does Anderson mean to say that if you get runs in England you get some sort of certificate that makes you a quality batsman. Don't the English and Australian players struggle when they play in the sub-continent? Does that mean they are bad players or weak teams. To me it does not matter where you get runs because in Test matches runs are runs," the former Pakistan skipper added.

Inzamam, who has played against some of the best Indian players ever, held high praise for Kohli.

"I always judge a batsman by seeing how many times the runs he scores leads to his team winning matches. In my opinion if a batsman scores 80 and it helps his team win, it matters more to me than someone scoring 150 and his team still losing.

"He is a quality player and when he is getting runs his team does well. That is important to judge or classify a batsman's value. There is hunger in him for runs," he said.

The veteran of 120 Tests lamented that the Asians have a habit of questioning their own teams and players while England and Australia always back their cricketers.

"If they don't do well there we start questioning the ability of our teams and players ourselves. We must not forget Australia lost 3-0 in Sri Lanka, we beat England 3-0 in the past in the UAE."

(With PTI inputs)