The Indian speedster Mohammed Siraj has been fined 15% of his match fee by the International Cricket Council on account of breaching Level 1 of the ICC code of conduct. This came as an aftereffect of the aggressive celebration Siraj did after taking Ben Duckett's wicket on Day 4 of the third Test between India and England at the Lord's Cricket Ground. As per the ICC Code of Conduct, Mohammed Siraj has likely breached the conduct stated in Article 2.5, which says, “using language, actions, or gestures which disparage or which could provoke an aggressive reaction from a batter upon his/her dismissal during an International Match.” Read also: Akash Deep’s Chaotic Nightwatchman Entry Stuns Day 4 Test What happened during Ben Duckett dismissal? The incident happened on Day 4 when Mohammed Siraj almost bumped his shoulder with Ben Duckett after taking his wicket. Siraj pulled in Duckett with a length coming around 140 kps. Duckett, who was looking good on the crease, tried to pull it with soft hands, only to get trapped by Jasprit Bumrah at mid-on. The moment Duckett got out, Siraj came running in celebration mode, veins popping and almost shouting "c'mon" on Duckett's face before Washington Sun pulled him for a hug. Duckett avoided eye contact and did not say a word and walked out. The situation tensed from Day 3 when Indian players had a word or two with Zak Crawley and Duckett in the last seven minutes of the play. Crawled was alleged to interrupt the play, sometimes citing a sight screen issue, and then acting like he was injured by Bumrah's ball. Not only that, Gill mocked Crawley when the latter tried to call the physio. Duckett, standing on the other side, got involved and had a heated banter with Gill. And later, on day 4, when Siraj Got Crawley, the reaction overflowed. Notably, this is Mohammed Siraj's second offense in 24 months. The last time he got one, was after he took Travis Head's wicket at Adelaide, due to a similar send-off during the 2024-25 Border-Gavaskar Series. There, he was fined 20% of his math fees.