Keeping cricket aside, Pakistan captain Mohammad Rizwan is randomly trolled for his broken English, and now former Australian cricketer Brad Hogg joined the thread. Hogg recently became very popular after appearing in a video in which a boy represents Rizwan. Hogg is seen taking an interview of the dummy, who is as usual, fumbling while speaking gibberish. As the video went viral on social media, people picked it up and slammed Hogg's mentality for participating in this mockery video. A few users slammed the colonized mindset, urging the fans to be proud enough of their indigenous languages. A user shared the video writing, "We living in the subcontinent should get out of this colonial mindset. English is not our language or mother tongue. Also, our players should speak Urdu and take your translator with it. This is our National pride, not English. Pathetic unprofessionalism by ex-cricketers!" Not only, many of them have thrashed Hogg for his mean-mindedness, hoping that Australia would be ashamed of him. One of the users wrote, "This is terrible. Brad Hogg should not be doing that. Players are at that level for their cricketing skills, not their ability to communicate in English." Another one wrote: "Wrong. U can't shame someone publicly. Not done in right spirit" Watch the video here: Mohammad Rizwan = Virat Kohli Virat is also drinking water i am also drinking water and he is also eating food and I'm also eating food ðŸ˜ðŸ˜ pic.twitter.com/vrgwxI6gJT — Being Political (@BeingPolitical1) March 16, 2025 However, a lot of fans have supported the troll, saying that Rizzi must learn English being a part of the Commonwealth, and because most interviews are done in English. Read also: 'Everyone waits for us to lose so that they can talk about it': Haris Rauf Rizwan by Pak comedian Trolled After Pakistan Exit Recently, Mohammad Rizwan's vocabulary has become the latest target of online ridicule following the team’s disastrous ICC Champions Trophy 2025 campaign. A few days ago, a viral clip from a talk show featured comedian Tabish Hashmi mimicking Rizwan’s press conference mannerisms while former cricketers Mohammad Amir, Ahmed Shehzad, and Rashid Latif laughed along. Hashmi argued that Rizwan, as the face of Pakistan’s cricket, should speak more eloquently. His comments sparked outrage, with fans questioning the necessity of such scrutiny. Some pointed out that Rizwan has never claimed to be fluent in English and that his job is to perform on the field, not impress linguistically. Criticism over language has long plagued South Asian cricketers, with past players like Sarfaraz Ahmed and Kamran Akmal facing similar treatment. However, this instance highlights a deeper issue—whether fluency in English should define a cricketer’s worth.