Following Day 2's play at Sydney, Australia coach Andrew McDonald expressed that India's celebration towards Sam Konstas after Usman Khawaja's celebration was "intimidating" and that the ICC endorses it. On day 1, in the last over, Usman Khawaja was wasting time so that they didn't have to play more overs. When Jasprit Bumrah was getting ready to bowl, Khawaja asked him to wait, to which Bumrah got agitated. He literally stopped twice, and then Konstas from the non-striker end turned back and threw some aggressive words at Bumrah. To that, he got more triggered, and the umpire had to intervene to calm both the players. Within two balls, Bumrah edged Khawaja, and the Indians celebrated aggressively, with Bumrah giving a death stare to Konstas. Even Virat Kohli narrowly missed another shoulder with him. Speaking about that, McDonald said he checked Konstas after that. He said, "My conversation to him (Konstas) was just around whether he's okay. Clearly, the way that India celebrated was quite intimidating," McDonald told reporters a day on from the incident. It's clearly within the Laws of the Game, within the rules and regulations – there's been no charges laid. Read also: Jasprit Bumrah Reveals His Way of Unleashing Aggression If no fine is imposed that is the accepted benchmark: McDonald Virat Kohli was imposed a fine of 20% of his match fee and a demerit point after the physical altercation with Konstas at Melbourne. Andy Pycroft, the ICC match referee who was there at Melbourne, is looking after the fifth Test as well. Speaking about ICC Code of Conduct, McDonald said, "It's clear that it's acceptable because there were no fines or punishments. I'll leave that up to the ICC and obviously Andy Pycroft being the match referee and the umpires out there. If they thought that it was satisfactory, then I suppose that's the benchmark we're playing amongst." Earlier, India was accused of time-wasting on Friday when Shubman Gill slowed play before lunch, prompting comments from Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne. Gill responded before edging Nathan Lyon to Smith at slip. On SEN Radio's podcast, Scott Boland criticized India's slow pace, noting frequent physio visits. However, a tense exchange unfolded between Prasidh Krishna and Australia’s Konstas too, but Krishna dismissed any frustration, emphasizing India's enjoyment of aggressive cricket.