logo
Ben Stokes acted like a spoilt kid: Pundits slam him over Manchester draw drama

Ben Stokes acted like a spoilt kid: Pundits slam him over Manchester draw drama

India Today6 days ago
Former India cricketer Sanjay Manjrekar called out Ben Stokes's antics in the final hour of the Manchester Test after India declined his offer of a draw to end the match an hour early. The decorated broadcaster did not hold back, labelling Stokes a "spoilt kid" for engaging in a sledging battle with Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar after the duo refused to accept the draw before the scheduled close of play on Day 5.advertisementAt the end of the 138th over, India held a lead of 75 runs as the final hour commenced. According to the laws of cricket, both teams can agree to a draw if they believe a favourable result is no longer possible in the final hour. Stokes approached the umpires and indicated his willingness to offer a draw. However, Jadeja and Sundar declined the England captain's offer on Sunday, 27 July.Television cameras panned to India captain Shubman Gill in the dressing room. Gill remained expressionless, refraining from intervening or sending a message to the middle, seemingly supporting the decision of the two batters to continue, as they were both approaching personal milestones. Jadeja was batting on 89, 11 short of his fifth Test century, while Washington Sundar was on 80, 20 away from his maiden Test hundred.
Stokes was visibly disappointed when India opted to carry on. He approached Jadeja and threw verbal jabs, questioning whether he truly wanted to score a Test hundred against the likes of Harry Brook and Ben Duckett.Scored a hundred, saved the Test, farmed aura! #RavindraJadeja didn't hesitate, till the end #ENGvIND 5th TEST | Starts THU, 31st July, 2:30 PM | Streaming on JioHotstar! pic.twitter.com/cc3INlS07P— Star Sports (@StarSportsIndia) July 27, 2025The implication was clear - Stokes had no intention of using his frontline bowlers and instead introduced part-timer Brook into the attack. From the other end, England deployed Joe Root.Both Jadeja and Sundar capitalised on the soft bowling, racing to their centuries. Brook even attempted to shake hands after Jadeja reached his hundred in the 141st over with a towering six. However, India continued to bat, giving Sundar the opportunity to reach his own milestone before accepting the draw.Brook looked somewhat foolish as he delivered gentle full tosses, which Jadeja duly dispatched en route to a well-earned century. India eventually declared at 425 for 4, having recovered from a dire start at 0 for 2. Centuries from Gill, Jadeja and Sundar helped India claw their way back and salvage a draw from the jaws of defeat, having batted across five sessions to save the Test and keep the series alive.MANJREKAR DISAPPOINTED WITH STOKESadvertisement"One thing is being unhappy that the batters haven't walked off and that he has to bowl his overworked main bowlers. But throwing lollipops and showing a bit of grumpiness - that was Ben Stokes behaving like a spoilt kid," Manjrekar told JioHotstar."I can understand him being surprised that India wanted to continue. 'If you wanted to get a hundred, why didn't you get it against the main bowlers?' - that was his grievance. But everything won't always go your way. He should have handled it better."Ben Stokes, the hero and the champion that I admire, on that occasion behaved like a spoilt kid," he added.The trio of Stokes, Brook and Zak Crawley continued chatting to the Indian batters in the middle, but Jadeja and Sundar remained composed, keeping their focus firmly on reaching their deserved hundreds.Jadeja and Sundar had come together after Shubman Gill was dismissed just after reaching his hundred on the stroke of lunch. The pair denied England another wicket for the remainder of the day, batting through two full sessions. Both displayed remarkable composure and resilience, seemingly waiting for the final hour to accelerate and complete their centuries.advertisementDID STOKES REFUSE HANDSHAKE WITH JADJEA?Manjrekar also noted that Stokes did not shake hands with Jadeja after the match, which angered the Indian all-rounder."After the match, Jadeja went to shake hands with Ben Stokes. Ben was still furious. During the earlier exchange, Jadeja handled it very well - he was smiling. But when Stokes didn't shake hands, that's when Jadeja lost his cool. Until then, he had kept his composure," Manjrekar said.England were left ruing a missed opportunity to secure victory, despite having posted 669 runs in their first innings and holding a commanding 311-run lead.India, meanwhile, will take confidence into the final Test at The Oval in London, starting on 31 July. They still trail 1-2 in the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy but have a golden opportunity to draw the series in the finale.- EndsTune InMust Watch
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

First Time In 91 Years! 3 Indian Batters Have Scored More Than...
First Time In 91 Years! 3 Indian Batters Have Scored More Than...

News18

time19 minutes ago

  • News18

First Time In 91 Years! 3 Indian Batters Have Scored More Than...

Last Updated: Three batters—KL Rahul, Shubman Gill, and Ravindra Jadeja—have scored more than 500 runs for India in the ongoing series against England. Ravindra Jadeja has impressed with his batting performances for India in the ongoing five-match Test series against England. In five matches, he has scored more than 500 runs for the Shubman Gill-led side. This is the first time in his career that Jadeja has scored 500 runs in a Test series for the Indian team. Jadeja needed 37 runs in the second innings of the ongoing fifth India-England Test at the Oval to complete 500 runs in the 2025 edition of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, and he achieved the objective during the third session of the third day's play. Team India played its first-ever Test match in June 1932 against England at Lord's, but their first-ever Test series was played in 1933-34 at home against the English team. In that series (3-match assignment), Lala Amarnath finished as the top run getter for India. In six innings of three matches, he amassed a total of 203 runs. A total of five Indian batters have scored more than 400 runs in the ongoing series. During the 1989 edition of the Ashes series played in England, five batters—Mark Taylor (834), Dean Jones (566), Steve Waugh (506), Allan Border (442), and David Boon (442)—scored more than 400 runs for the Baggy Greens. view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

England vs India: Akash Deep half-century the unexpected windfall as visitors take control on fifth Test
England vs India: Akash Deep half-century the unexpected windfall as visitors take control on fifth Test

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

England vs India: Akash Deep half-century the unexpected windfall as visitors take control on fifth Test

India's 'who-would-have-thought' series of pleasant surprises continued deep into the fifth Test of this engrossing series. Who would have thought that nightwatchman Akash Deep would score 66 on a bright morning at The Oval? Who would have thought opener Yashasvi Jaiswal would just hit three fours, seven fewer than Akash Deep, in an incredible first session? This was a nightmarish morning for England and it couldn't have come at a worse time. The mysterious behaviour of English pitches continued to intrigue outsiders. On Day 2, the Oval pitch had witnessed the fall of 15 wickets and those getting out included steady and safe batsmen like Joe Root, KL Rahul, Ollie Pope and Sai Sudharsan. On Day 3, a night-watchman with dodgy technique was having a ball, the demons that resided in the wicket had checked out this morning. From the time Akash Deep swung left-arm spinner Jacob Bethell, brought in for a change of ends for the pacers in the day's first over, for two fours, India's agenda had been laid on the table. They would take chances and rattle the English bowlers. A maiden international 5️⃣0️⃣ for Akash Deep 👏#SonySportsNetwork #ENGvIND #NayaIndia #DhaakadIndia #TeamIndia #ExtraaaInnings — Sony Sports Network (@SonySportsNetwk) August 2, 2025 Night-watchmen are cricket's enigmatic characters – they mostly get the graveyard shift when the lights are fading and their main task is to take most of the strike to shield the main batsman. They are tasked to take a bullet for those whose batting lives are much more important than them. Their brief is to survive the day and in case they do, they get a reward. The team gives them a licence to throw the bat around, hit a few agricultural shots, regale the crowd and the mates in the dressing room. That was the reaction when Akash Deep hit Bethell to the area that is the favourite of all night- watchmen, or those who don't care about the angle of the elbow when batting – the cow's corner. Once the pacers came into the attack, Akash Deep shelved his aggression for a while. He would now hang back in the crease and wait for the ball to come to him. There was no effort to take the forward stride to go and meet the ball. In that period of play, his bread-and-butter shot was the poke to the point region – another pet stroke of survival for non-bona fide batsmen. New-ball bowlers find it extremely difficult to bowl to batsmen with a non-textbook batting approach, but good hands. The pacers are used to bowling at batsmen who come forward or go on the back foot to defend balls. But those who stay in the crease and try to work the ball are difficult to deal with. Batsmen like Akash Deep may not have the footwork but are blessed with the reflexes to keep the ball away from the stumps. He did the same when dealing with Josh Tongue and Gus Atkinson. Nightwachmen also need the kindness of fielders to remain at the crease. England, these last couple of days, have been charitable. So when Akash Deep edged a Tongue ball to the slips – Zak Crawley couldn't hold on. That chance brought out the real batsman in Akash Deep. Having spent an hour at the crease and already hit four boundaries, Akash Deep was now feeling at home at his unfamiliar batting position of No.4. The first sign of the new-found confidence came when India's lead swelled to 100, it was 23 overnight. It was merely a flick to square leg but had the finesse of a top-order batsman. Akash Deep's eyes were set, he was following the swing of the ball, leaving the ones that went away and defending those on the stumps. The pokes square of the wicket were all gone, now Akash Deep was cutting the ball powerfully. Once he even hit an audacious slap over the point fielder. All this while, non-striker Jaiswal was happy to give Akash Deep the strike, as the latter scored runs and frustrated England. After a few blazing drives, he reached his half-century with a wild pull with the aim of sending the ball over the mid-wicket boundary. He didn't connect well but the ball ran to square-leg for a four. Every time a lower-order batsman scores, the smiles in the dressing room are broader and there is amusement in the balcony. So as Akash Deep threw strong punches in the air to celebrate his fifty, skipper Shubman Gill beamed while clapping. Even coach Gautam Gambhir had a smile on his face. Akash Deep would eventually get out for 66, a short ball from Overton hitting the shoulder of his bat and ballooning into the hands of the point fielder. India, by then, had a lead of about 150. In this tight game, the nightwatchman had gone beyond his call of duty. Expected to hurt England with the ball, he had done it with the bat. Who would have thought that Sai Sudharshan getting out late on Day 2 would prove to be the turning point of the series for India?

Ravindra Jadeja Breaks VVS Laxman's Record Of Most Runs For India As...
Ravindra Jadeja Breaks VVS Laxman's Record Of Most Runs For India As...

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

Ravindra Jadeja Breaks VVS Laxman's Record Of Most Runs For India As...

Last Updated: Ravindra Jadeja has scored more than 480 runs for India in the ongoing series against England as a No. 6 or lower batter. World No. 1 Test all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja is making headlines for his batting in the ongoing five-match Test series between India and England. He has played in all five matches of the away series for the Shubman Gill-led side and, with the help of four fifties and one century, has scored more than 480 runs in the ongoing series. At the time of filing the report, he was batting on 19 runs from 31 balls. He came out to bat at No. 7 for India in the second innings on Saturday (August 2), and during his stay at the crease in the second session, when he crossed the 12-run mark by hitting Jamie Overton for a four on the first ball of the 60th over, he took his tally of runs to 475, which is one more than VVS Laxman's 474. During the India tour of the West Indies in 2002, Laxman played all five matches at No. 6 or lower and scored 474 runs. No Indian batter has scored more runs for India in a Test as a No. 6 or lower batter than Jadeja now. If Jadeja manages to score at least 37 runs in the second innings, then he will become the third Indian after Shubman Gill and KL Rahul to score at least 500 runs in the ongoing series. view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store