Hussey, who has averaged more on Asian soil than any other Aussie batsman to have played five Tests or more in those foreign conditions, said riling Kohli may backfire on the Australians and they should instead focus on a plan to dismiss him cheaply during the series starting February 23.
"From an Australian point of view, Kohli is public enemy No.1 and we have to get him out cheaply. I wouldn't try and fire him (Kohli) up. I think he thrives on that and he's a real competitor. He loves being in the fight and loves the contest out in the middle," Hussey was quoted as saying by cricket.Com.Au.
He said the result of the series will not be decided by which team is more verbal but on the basis of better execution of plans with more consistency.
Also Read
Kohli has been India's dominant batsman in the last couple of years and he made Australia pay a price for verbally targeting him during the Boxing Day Test at the MCG in 2014.
The Delhi batsman scored his then personal-best of 169 in that drawn match and took aim at those Australian opponents with whom he had sparred during his innings.
Hussey said the individual battle between the rival captains will be decisive in the series, where Australia has triumphed just once in a Test campaign in almost 50 years.
"Kohli is very confident at the moment, he knows the conditions so well and generally if he plays well, India win.
"And it's similar with Australia -- Steve Smith and David Warner are the two most important batsmen in the Australian line-up and if they score runs, generally Australia go well. If they don't, the other batsmen are under enormous pressure," Hussey said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content