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I owe it to myself to have a few more good performances

I owe it to myself to have a few more good performances

Rhyl Journal6 days ago
Crawley has long divided opinion as he possesses an underwhelming average of 31.4 from 58 Tests, with several dramatic fallow periods, but he has been backed to the hilt by Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum.
The patience has occasionally been rewarded and was on day two of the fourth Rothesay Test against India, where Crawley and Ben Duckett put on a buccaneering 166 in 32 overs at Emirates Old Trafford.
After helping England close on 225 for two in response to India's 358 all out, Crawley, who was dismissed for 84 at a ground where he made 189 in the 2023 Ashes, said: 'I have high standards for myself and I work very hard on my game.
'I always want more from myself and I've certainly wanted more for myself than I've got in the last year or so. That's just an internal thing, I don't feel that pressure from anyone else.
'I just feel like I owe it to myself to have a few more good performances. Days like this make the practice and the tougher times worth it a bit more.
'I certainly feel at my best when my body is relaxed. I managed to do that quite well here.
'I wanted more runs but I feel like I worked hard and earned those runs. I don't think I've ever got out in my life and not been annoyed and I was certainly annoyed (after getting out).'
Crawley and Duckett, who was also unable to get to a hundred after nicking off on 94, put England in the box seat just over a week on from being front and centre of a time-wasting row at Lord's.
A brilliant day for England! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
We trail by just 1️⃣3️⃣3️⃣ runs with 8️⃣ wickets in hand.
Roll on tomorrow 💪 pic.twitter.com/6Sloskgfxa
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 24, 2025
India captain Shubman Gill accused England of contravening the 'spirit of the game', insisting England's openers arrived to the crease 90 seconds late in a testy seven-minute passage at the end of day three that hung over the rest of the third Test.
But Crawley said: 'I sit in my spot until the umpires go out, I saw them go out and I walked out. I wasn't aware we were 90 seconds late. I didn't think too much about that at the time or even now.
'I've always enjoyed that part of cricket, especially when you're batting where it's two against 11 and they're desperate to get you out and chirping you.
'Most of the time I probably let it slide but most of the time, I feel like it's a good chance to put it back on them. At Lord's, I loved that little passage. No one stepped over the line, it was just competitive cricket, I really enjoyed it.'
Ben Stokes claimed his first Test five-wicket haul since September 2017 to restrict India, who were remarkably able to call upon Rishabh Pant despite him suffering a serious injury to his right foot.
Less than 24 hours after retiring hurt on 37 and being taken off the field on a golf buggy, Pant resumed his innings although substitute fielder Dhruv Jurel is taking on wicketkeeper duties for the rest of the Test.
Amid a suspected broken metatarsal – India have not publicly confirmed the severity of his injury – Pant limped every time he moved forward before being bowled for 54 by Jofra Archer, who claimed three for 73.
India all-rounder Shardul Thakur said: 'We have seen him doing a lot of amazing things. And this was just another amazing thing that he did for the team.
'His pain bearing capacity is very high. If he is in pain, it is a big injury.'
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Broken Ben Stokes steps aside for England prodigy Jacob Bethell to take the stage in India series finale
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Broken Ben Stokes steps aside for England prodigy Jacob Bethell to take the stage in India series finale

The news filtered through on Wednesday morning just as bleary eyed journalists were shuffling around The Oval 's perimeter towards an underground press room. Ben Stokes was out. England were heading into the heat of battle in this decisive fifth Test without their warrior captain. In walked Stokes looking like a Viking god, blonde locks slicked back, calves chiselled out of stone, to explain why he could give no more to this absorbing series against India. 'I'm very disappointed. It's a decent tear to one of the muscles that I can't pronounce. We took as long as we could to make the decision.' Stokes' shoulder injury will take six or seven weeks to recover, and he hinted that the looming Ashes series, which begins in Perth in November, was a factor in his decision to step back. 'It was one of those, weighing up the risk and reward, and the risk was way too high if I damaged it further than it is. I wouldn't expect any of my players to play with this kind of injury.' 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England captain Ben Stokes confident of Ashes fitness despite shoulder injury
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England captain Ben Stokes confident of Ashes fitness despite shoulder injury

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Ben Stokes expects to be out for up to seven weeks with shoulder injury
Ben Stokes expects to be out for up to seven weeks with shoulder injury

South Wales Guardian

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Ben Stokes expects to be out for up to seven weeks with shoulder injury

Stokes, whose deputy Ollie Pope will lead the team in his absence, has been battling a variety of issues over the course of the Rothesay series and has finally been laid low with a problem that reared its head during last week's draw at Old Trafford. He will be replaced by Jacob Bethell, making his first Test appearance of the year in one of four changes to the England XI. It is understood Stokes has sustained a grade-three muscle tear, meaning a significant lay-off awaits the all-rounder, although he suggested a recovery time of between six and seven weeks once his rehabilitation starts. England do not play Test cricket again until the Ashes this winter. 'I am obviously disappointing to not be able to finish the series,' an emotional Stokes said as he addressed a press conference on Wednesday morning. 'I have got a decent tear of one of the muscles I can't pronounce, I don't know how to say it, but we took as long as we could to make that decision around that. 'A bit of emotion goes into this kind of stuff when you find out what you have done – bowling was ruled out as soon as we got the scan results. 'But you need that time chatting with the medical team, Baz, then just 20 minutes to myself out there in the morning just to really be clear around the decision that we made.' Stokes added: 'It was one of those where you were weighing up the risk-reward, and the risk was way too high for damaging us any further than it currently is. 'I wouldn't expect to put any one of my players at risk with an injury like this. 'I will start rehabbing now and obviously focus on what we have got coming up in the winter. 'Obviously I am very disappointed, but I needed a bit more time that I would give to these kind of things to make a decision and it helps that we have a really good strong squad to be able to select from to put a team out that we think can get us a win this week.' Liam Dawson has been dropped one match into his comeback, with England opting to go without a front-line spinner, while pace pair Jofra Archer and Brydon Carse are rested. Three fresh quicks come into the side, with Surrey pair Gus Atkinson and Jamie Overton returning on home soil and Josh Tongue completing the line-up.

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