Hussain's 115 in the triangular series final
defeat by India at Lord's yesterday was his first hundred in 72
one-day internationals.
After reaching three figures Hussain turned
towards the media centre at Lord's, held up three fingers and
pointed to the number three on his back with some reports
suggesting he also mouthed an obscenity.
Hussain's gestures were in response to recent
English media suggestions - notably from former England players
Jonathan Agnew, Ian Botham and Bob Willis - that the Essex
batsman's scoring rate was too slow for one-day international
cricket and more aggressive players should bat at number three.
Match referee and former South Africa
all-rounder Mike Procter decided not to take any action against
Hussain after witnessing the incident even though the
International Cricket Council's (ICC) code of conduct states:
"Players shall at no time engage in conduct unbecoming to their
status which could bring them or the game of cricket into
disrepute."
Nevertheless England and Wales Cricket Board
(ECB) chief executive Tim Lamb said he would be following
Procter's example and would not reprimand Hussain.
"I would describe it more as a gesture of
defiance rather than insulting," Lamb explained.
"If he had waved two fingers then that would
have been a different matter, but he was just being defiant", he
said.
"We need a bit of passion in the game and
he's a passionate person and it's his passion that is one of his
great strengths and as far as I'm concerned it was nothing more
than that."
Hussain himself said: "It wasn't aimed at the
media in general, who've been very fair to me.
"I'm sure most people don't give a monkeys
but there have been one or two gentlemen who've been permanently
on my case about this batting position, putting me under
pressure.
"I suppose I'm old enough and ugly enough to
take it, but they have laboured it. I was gesturing with my body
that I bat at number three and I felt I'd proved a point on the
biggest of stages.