India captain Virat Kohli has dismissed reports claiming a rift between him and opening batsman Rohit Sharma as "ridiculous" and insisted there is nothing wrong in the team camp as they prepare for a tour of the West Indies. Rumours of cracks within the India team were reported by local media after Kohli's side bowed out of the Cricket World Cup following their semi-final loss to New Zealand earlier this month. Sharma - the vice-captain of the one-day and Twenty20 international side - recently unfollowed Kohli and the captain's Bollywood wife Anushka Sharma on Instagram, adding fuel to the suggestions the two senior players were not on good terms. But Kohli dismissed the speculation ahead of the team's departure for the tour of West Indies, which starts on August 3 with the first of three Twenty20 internationals followed by three ODI matches and two Tests. "It's baffling to be honest. Ridiculous to read some stuff that comes out," the 30-year-old told reporters in Mumbai. "Here we are feeding off lies, we are overlooking facts, turning a blind eye to all the good things that have happened. And creating fantasies and scenarios in our head and we want to accept this is the truth. "I have seen this for too long now. It's bringing personal lives into the picture. It is disrespectful after a moment." Sharma was key to India's semi-final finish in the 50-over showpiece event, with the opener topping the batting chart with 648 runs including a record five centuries in nine matches. Kohli, the world's top Test and ODI batsman, scored five fifties but was unable to record a three-figure score. Stories circulated that the two big guns were leading different camps during the World Cup in England, with pundits suggesting the captaincy could be split between the pair. "I have played the game for 11 years, Rohit's played for 10 years, it's bizarre that you know ... this from the outside when the changing-room environment is so good," said Kohli. "Please come and see for yourself, how to talk to a young Kuldeep Yadav or talk with respect to a senior like MS Dhoni. We can't show you a video. <strong>_____________________</strong> <strong>_____________________</strong> "It baffles you as a leader, as a coach, and as a team when lies are being floated around. And they are made to look believable. We have had no issues. “I have also heard a lot of things. Now you can only hear things from the outside. If the dressing-room environment had been bad, then we couldn’t have possibly played the quality of cricket that we played. Because I know how the dressing-room environment and trust factor becomes important to succeed in international cricket. “The journey we have had in ODIs, in Tests and T20s, that wouldn’t have been possible without camaraderie, respect and understanding. “If I don’t like a person or if I am insecure about a person, you will see it on my face or my behaviour towards the person and that’s how simple it is. “I have always praised Rohit whenever I have got an opportunity because I believe that he is good. I don’t know who is befitting from all this but ... here we get some kind of pleasure in bringing Indian cricket down.” Meanwhile the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has invited applications for backroom positions including the head coach. Coach Ravi Shastri's tenure ended after the World Cup and was extended for the West Indies series. "With Ravi ... all of us have a great camaraderie. Everyone in the team shares mutual respect and we have done really well as a group," said Kohli. "We definitely will be very happy if he is continuing as coach." Kohli said the team was looking forward to the West Indies series, especially the five-day matches which have been included in the World Test Championship. The aim of the championship is to give individual Test series greater context and spark a worldwide revival of interest in the five-day game.