logo
Ben Stokes' waning influence with the bat on display in England's soggy defeat

Ben Stokes' waning influence with the bat on display in England's soggy defeat

The Guardian2 days ago
It was raining hard in Birmingham on Sunday morning. A weight of great black clouds broke over the city while it was feeling its way into the day. On the streets people pressed themselves together under the cover of bus stops and awnings: revellers off to the Queens Heath pride festival, heavy metal lovers making their way home after Black Sabbath's farewell gig at Villa Park the previous evening, and cricket supporters bound for the ground, most of them with last-minute tickets, split between anxious Indian and wry English fans, the only people in the city who were happy enough to be getting wet.
The bad weather was about the only way England were going to get out of this match with a draw. A team who have spent three years learning how to do the improbable were in no position at all to attempt the unremarkable and bat out the match, even after the rain had washed out the first hour-and-a-half of the day. Their attempt to play out the remaining 80 overs of the game was as good as up by the lunch break, broken by a superb spell of fast bowling by Akash Deep, who had only played seven Tests before this, but is 28, and has spent years in Indian first class cricket learning how to get every last bit out of unhelpful pitches like this one.
Deep took as many wickets in this match as England's four quicks managed between them and gave them one long lesson in how to bowl in their own conditions. He produced more good balls in his first spell on Sunday than they had between them in the match. One of them got Ollie Pope, dismissed playing the sort of janky defensive shot that makes people question his spot in the order all over again, and another did for Harry Brook, who was beaten by a jaffa that nipped back off a crack and smacked into his thigh bone.
So in came Ben Stokes, England's last hope now the clouds had blown over. Strange to say about a man who's performed so many wonders, but it felt like no hope at all. Stokes is just the sort of man you might hire to slay the Nemean Lion, but it's less obvious that he's the one you would send in with a shovel to muck out the Augean Stables. Time was when he could do it for you. It's easy to forget, among everything else he's done for England, that he's played a series of rearguard innings over the years for captains before him, 66 off 188 balls against New Zealand in 2018, 62 off 187 against India at Trent Bridge later that same year.
But anyone who's watching knows those days are a way behind him. On Sunday, Stokes managed just over an hour and a half of batting. There was one of those familiar pull shots against Prasidh Krishna, like a lumberjack making the last cut on a California redwood, and a couple of crisp glances to fine leg, but that was about the best of it. He was, he always is, bamboozled by Ravindra Jadeja's way of bowling into the rough outside off-stump. It's like watching a grizzly bear try to solve a Rubik's Cube. He was eventually done, in the last over before lunch, by one of Washington Sundar's innocuous off-breaks.
Stokes has such a big influence as captain that it goes almost unnoticed that he has so little influence as a batsman. He's made one century in the past three years, and that was a bar-room brawl in a losing cause against Australia at Lord's, when he was furious that Alex Carey had run out Jonny Bairstow. Since then, he's scored six fifties in 33 innings, none bigger, or better, than the 80 he made in the first innings of an English victory in Christchurch last November. His batting average was 39 in the first year of his captaincy, but was 28 last year, and is just 19 so far in this one.
Among all the other records Shubman Gill set this week, he outscored Stokes by 397 runs in the match, which is the largest gap between two captains in the history of Test cricket. Gill, of course, doesn't have to do any of his team's bowling. Stokes was superb with the ball at Headingley just last week. For all the hard work he's put into that over the past 12 months, you wonder how he would be batting now if he had been willing, or able, to put the same sort of time into the other side of his all-round game. He didn't play at all for Durham this year, and aside from his England commitments, he's had exactly one red ball innings in the past year.
Sign up to The Spin
Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action
after newsletter promotion
It's asking a hell of a lot of him to bat as well as he bowls, and bowl as well as he leads, but that's what England need.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Glens beat Reds to go top of Women's Premiership
Glens beat Reds to go top of Women's Premiership

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Glens beat Reds to go top of Women's Premiership

Glentoran put recent cup heartache behind them with a 2-0 win over Cliftonville at Solitude on Tuesday to go top of the Women's east Belfast side were beaten 3-1 by Bohemians in the quarter-finals of the All-Island Cup on Saturday having thrown away a 2-0 half-time advantage against Cliftonville in the Women's League Cup final the week they exacted a measure of revenge for the latter of those two defeats when goals in each half from Jessica Foy and Demi Vance ensured a sixth win from six games in league action this a meeting of the two sides who have shared the past five league titles, Foy opened the scoring just past the half-hour mark as she controlled a free-kick floated into the box and calmly slotted doubled the visitors' advantage after the break when coming forward off the left flank and finishing well after a move across the box. Kim Turner's side are two points clear of second-place Linfield with Cliftonville a further three back, although the Blues have played a game more.

Transfer news LIVE: Chelsea defender eyed by Villarreal, Elanga set for Newcastle medical, Kudus to Spurs latest
Transfer news LIVE: Chelsea defender eyed by Villarreal, Elanga set for Newcastle medical, Kudus to Spurs latest

The Sun

time27 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Transfer news LIVE: Chelsea defender eyed by Villarreal, Elanga set for Newcastle medical, Kudus to Spurs latest

THE thrills and spills of the summer transfer window are well underway with some huge deals in the pipeline over the next few weeks! Chelsea defender Axel Disasi has been eyed by Spanish giants Villarreal, according to reports. Transfer guru Fabrizio Romano has reported that Anthony Elanga is set for his Newcastle medical today. And Tottenham Mohammed Kudus, according to reports.

Owen Farrell hits the ground running after his shock Lions call-up to replace injured Elliot Daly... as Johnny Sexton jokes: 'He must've had the playbook on the plane!'
Owen Farrell hits the ground running after his shock Lions call-up to replace injured Elliot Daly... as Johnny Sexton jokes: 'He must've had the playbook on the plane!'

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Owen Farrell hits the ground running after his shock Lions call-up to replace injured Elliot Daly... as Johnny Sexton jokes: 'He must've had the playbook on the plane!'

It was the Lions' last training session before taking on Australia's top provincial team, but all the cameras were pointing at a player who won't be on duty today. Owen Farrell was out there, joining in, tuning up and striving to show he can be ready when called upon. It was the former England captain's first on-field involvement since arriving as a replacement for Elliot Daly and it was no surprise he was the centre of attention — literally, in fact, as he had a midfield role once the prying lenses left and training ramped up. Later, when the rest of the squad had finished their work, Farrell was doing his extras: sprint drills to top up his fitness levels. Despite an injury-wrecked season, he looked sharp — someone who is here to do much more than offer behind-the-scenes leadership. He looked like a player being prepared for a key role in the remainder of the tour. While a potential Lions Test side are primed for a revenge mission against the Brumbies, this is the fascinating subplot. Farrell's arrival has caused an almighty stir and plenty of criticism, but within the Lions camp they are exuding anticipation and optimism about what the 33-year-old can offer them. He is working closely with good-friend-turned-playmaker mentor Johnny Sexton, and the Irish icon spoke passionately about the belated introduction of the head coach's son. Firstly, he was asked how confident he is about Farrell Jnr's ability to get up to speed before a likely appearance against the Australia-New Zealand Invitational XV in Adelaide on Saturday. 'He's already up to speed,' said Sexton. 'It might take someone else 10 days to fit in, but he's hit the ground running. He must have had the playbook on the plane because he has come in and not missed a beat. The 33-year-old fly-half teamed up with the Lions as a replacement for the injured Elliot Daly 'He has trained really well. We can see the value that he's going to bring for the rest of the tour.' Unprompted, Sexton then delivered such a forceful endorsement of Farrell's call-up that you wondered why he had not been picked in the first place. Sexton said: 'How could you not bring him? I know he's had a bit of injury, but so have Sione (Tuipulotu) and Huw Jones. 'Experience is experience. He's a world-class player. Look at what he's won. He's been fantastic to have in camp and I'm sure he's going to add loads for the rest of the tour.' There is an assumption that adding a Test centurion into such a competitive selection equation — alongside Finn Russell, Fin Smith and Marcus Smith — must cause a degree of tension and doubt. Sexton argued otherwise. 'I know from playing 10 that if he's at 12, it's a dream,' he said. 'It makes your job easier. He's another organiser and another playmaker who can control the game. He's a leader. I could see the excitement on the 10s' faces when he was picked. 'They want to learn from the best. I can see the relationship he has with Finn. They seem to get on really well.' Lions captain Maro Itoje is similarly enthused by the arrival of someone who will be back alongside him at Saracens next season. Asked if the presence of such a senior figure in the ranks might undermine his authority, Itoje responded: 'I've known Owen since I was 11, but he didn't start talking to me until I was 12 or so! I have a very good relationship with him. 'He just wants the squad to do well. Sport is never about ego. I want people to speak, have their voices heard, and contribute in a positive way. Andy Farrell's Lions side are primed for a revenge mission against the Brumbies on Wednesday 'It's never about me having the final say or sticking my chest out. It's about how can we, as a collective, be successful? You can't do it by yourself. And when the team is successful, everyone wins. That's all I care about. And I know Owen's the same.' The Lions need to be better today, after a stuttering 21-10 win over the Waratahs which raised doubts about their strategic approach. They are likely to be far more direct, led by Bundee Aki at inside centre and in-form England prop Ellis Genge, as they strive to avenge a shock 14-12 defeat at the hands of the Brumbies on their last tour of Australia in 2013.

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