
During the opening hour of play on Day 3 at Headingley, India wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant became enraged when Chris Gaffaney, the on-field umpire, refused to replace the ball despite repeated protests.
Pant decided to bring up the matter with the umpire once more after Jasprit Bumrah's request for a ball change was denied after a check through the gauge. However, Pant was unable to conceal his annoyance when the ball was once again judged suitable for play, and in a moment of obvious annoyance, he threw it backhanded towards bowler Mohammed Siraj.
The Headingley audience responded audibly to the act, with loud jeers reverberating throughout the stands in response to Pant's response. Even though Siraj calmly recovered the ball and the throw wasn't directed at anyone, the gesture might nonetheless draw attention from the match referee because it so obviously expressed disapproval of an umpiring call.
But India's grievances didn't stop there. Shubman Gill, the captain, also spoke with the same umpire about the ball's condition during Siraj's subsequent over. Bumrah also went back to the umpire following a delivery.
See here:
Former India cricketer Ravi Shastri, who was on-air during play, stated repeatedly that it is "not worth" going to the umpire, even though the umpire's judgment remained the same.
“It's not worth going to the umpire. Shubman Gill should ask everyone [to] just wait for 4-5 overs, then go. This is only going to irritate the umpires further,” Shastri said on-air.
