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[VIDEOS] Ben Stokes - England’s best ever all-rounder? / England’s Test captain

ICC trophies are far more important.

Without Stokes, England might not have won 2019 WC and 2022 World T20.

Also, who can forget Stokes's Headingly heroics?
Not to England cricket fans.
The 2022 World T20 barely registered amongst English fans.

Fans still talk of Botham’s 1981 Ashes and indeed also of Stokes’s Headingley innings.

The 2019 WC was popular, but most English fans would trade that in a heartbeat to beat Australia in Australia in a Test series.
 
You've spent 3 years saying he is finished because of his knee. In that time he won England a t20 World Cup, played some incredibly test innings, and took a team that your beloved Root was leading to loss after loss, to immediate victories.

Stokes is and will remain one of the all time great cricketers because of his single handed feat in bringing England an ODI World Cup, a couple of incredible ATG test performances including a crucial Ashes test, and t20 World Cup. The captaincy and leadership he's shown since taking over the test side is just the cherry on top.

Ironic that you kept praising Archer for one good series in the World Cup, and bowling rubbish after that - saying many times he's the best in the world, but hate on Stokes because he's inconsistent.

You put all the praise on McCullum for the wins but blame Stokes for the loss. You put the blame on Stokes for veteran batter Joe Root having some poor form and playing silly shots but refused to give him credit for nurturing the young players.

And now let's not even get started on the great flip flop around your overall views now that Pakistani fans had accepted their team is rubbish.

Tough times indeed. I would take Stokes over any English player in my ATG team in any format.
You sound too emotional. You are ranting but your rants lack substance. Stokes has only 4-5 significant knocks in his entire career and that is not enough to consider him a legendary cricketer.

As far captaincy is concerned, it has been a total scam. He produced the exact same returns in India and home Ashes that Root did (1-4 drubbing & 2-2) so where is the improvement. In fact, he was directly responsible for losing the first Ashes Test because his suicidal declaration opened the door for Australia.

His captaincy has been rubbish. He can’t win any important series and he never gets into a WTC Final in spite of England playing the most Tests.

The Bazball and his captaincy gimmick is over and he no longer merits a place in the team. He has been rubbish in Asia throughout his career but he is reaching new lows now.

Not to mention he is incredibly selfish. He sat out of a series vs India and a World Cup for personal reasons and made lame excuses for retiring from ODIs only to selfishly revoke his retirement last min to play the World Cup where he got embarrassed by Shami.

Stokes is an average cricketer who produced 2-3 legendary moments in his career. He has not done remotely enough in any format to be considered a great cricketer.
 
Comparing Stokes with Botham is a blasphemy of highest order.

Botham is a legitimate top 40 cricketers of all time.

Flintoff would probably make it in the top 65-75 cricketers list too.

Stokes in Test cricket will probably not make it to top 75 cricketers of all time list.
 

Man arrested over burglary at home of Ben Stokes​


A man has been arrested following a burglary at the home of England cricket captain Ben Stokes.

Stokes, who was in Pakistan for the recent Test series, said his wife and two children were at the property in Castle Eden, County Durham, when a masked gang broke in on 17 October.

Durham Police said a 32-year-old man from North Yorkshire was arrested overnight on suspicion of burglary.

He has been released on bail while the investigation continues, the force added.

Stokes, 33, said his family did not come to "any physical harm" but a number of "sentimental" items were taken, including the medal for his OBE, which he received in 2020 for helping England win the World Cup the year before.

He posted pictures of the missing items on social media, which also included three necklaces, a ring and a designer bag.

The all-rounder, who also plays for Durham, said his "sole motivation" for sharing the images was "not the recovery of material items", but "to catch the people who did this".

A Durham Constabulary spokesperson said: "Officers continue to appeal for information and anyone who can help is asked to call 101, quoting incident number 543 of 17 October."

 
Stokes opted out of IPL to prolong England career

Captain Ben Stokes opted out of the Indian Premier League auction in order to prolong his England career.

In not taking part in the 'mega-auction' held last weekend, the 33-year-old faces being banned from the tournament for the next two seasons under new competition rules.

Speaking before leading England in the first Test against New Zealand in Christchurch on Thursday (22:00 GMT, Wednesday), Stokes told BBC Sport: "There's no hiding behind the fact that I'm at the back-end of my career.

"It's about looking at what I've got ahead and making the decision that is right for me to be able to prolong my career as long as possible. I want to be wearing this England shirt for as long as I can."

Stokes has been sold for more than £1m in three IPL auctions and was named the tournament's most valuable player for his spell with Rising Pune Supergiant in 2017.

But his more recent career has been plagued by a left-knee issue and he missed four England Tests after sustaining a hamstring injury in August.

Stokes is due to lead England on the Ashes tour of Australia next winter.

The all-rounder has spoken about his personal struggle during England's 2-1 defeat in Pakistan last month, when he endured a disappointing time on the field after returning from the hamstring problem. During the second Test, Stokes' house was burgled with his wife Clare and two children at home.

In Christchurch, the city of Stokes' birth, England begin a three-Test series that will take their total number of matches in 2024 to 17. No England team has ever played more in a calendar year.

The tourists are handing a debut to 21-year-old Warwickshire left-hander Jacob Bethell, who will bat at number three despite never before batting higher than number four in first-class cricket.

New Zealand, fresh from a breathtaking 3-0 series win in India, welcome prolific batter Kane Williamson back from injury and give a first cap to seamer Nathan Smith, who spent part of last summer with Worcestershire.

Of a green-tinged pitch, Stokes said: "If you saw that pitch in England, you'd be praying to God that you won the toss and could bowl first.

"It's amazing in New Zealand. You can look at a wicket and it plays completely different to what it looks like. We'll have to see how we go tomorrow, see what conditions we're faced with as the game goes further, and if we need to adapt to anything we'll try to do that."

New Zealand's win in India means they have an outside chance of reaching the World Test Championship final, having won the inaugural competition in 2021.

They join India, Australia, South Africa and Sri Lanka in vying for the two spots available, but England sit sixth in the table and are out of contention.

"The World Test Championship is a bit confusing. I don't look at it," said Stokes.

"Over a long period of time, if you're playing really good cricket, you're getting results that you want, you'll end up finding yourself in the final and in the mix.

"For me and this team it's about taking it game by game, series by series, and if you end up finding yourself in the position where you happen to be in the final, then it's great. I can't really ever remember if I've ever given any real time specifically to thinking about the World Test Championship."

England have not won a Test series in New Zealand in four attempts, dating back to 2008. Their last match in this country, a thrilling one-run defeat in Wellington in 2023, was only the fourth time any team had lost a Test after enforcing the follow-on.

"It's a cool rivalry that we've got," said New Zealand captain Tom Latham.

"We've had some great battles over the last five, seven years with England and that was no different a couple of seasons ago when they were out here.

"I'm sure it will produce some more thrilling games and both teams are looking forward to getting into it."

BBC
 

England captain Ben Stokes plays down fresh injury concerns and insists he WILL be fit for the second Test against New Zealand despite hurting his back​


Ben Stokes has played down fresh injury concerns after he failed to complete his sixth over on the fourth morning of the first Test against New Zealand, insisting he would be fit for this week's second game.

The England captain, who had said before the game that his body was 'good as gold' after worries about his hamstring had limited him to 10 overs in two Tests in Pakistan, felt a twinge in his back after going for a catch on the first day at Hagley Oval.

But he insisted: 'There was just a little bit of stiffness, and where we were in the game I thought, do I really need to do this and put myself at risk when I can just get through the rest of the game and go again in Wellington?

'So it was more of a precaution than anything else. I'll be fine for Wellington.'

Instead, Stokes was left to praise his 'three-in-one' Durham team-mate Brydon Carse, who became the first England seamer to take 10 wickets in an overseas Test since Ryan Sidebottom against New Zealand at Hamilton in March 2008.

'I've known Brydon's ability and skill for a while,' he said. 'I've watched him make his way at Durham for a couple of years, and there was no doubt I my mind that he was going to have an impact at the top level, and he's got the rewards for a tough tour of Pakistan.

'To have a bowler in your attack who can almost be three bowlers in one is massive. I use him as the enforcer when we go to the short stuff. But he's taken a lot of wickets this week as well, and his economy rate's been below three.

'He can fit in with whatever you need. And having him down the order at 10 makes our batting line-up really deep.'

Stokes was a pillar of strength earlier this year during Carse's three-month ban for historic gambling offences, and Carse admitted: 'Ben was one of the first people I spoke to. Over the past four or five months he's been there, in person or over the phone. I cannot thank him enough.

'I've known Ben for 10 years, and we have a good relationship. To have him captain me is a massive factor - he knows my cricket inside out. It's a very calming influence on me, letting me be myself and play my natural game.'

 
England captain Ben Stokes could be in hot water with the ICC after scoffing at his side's punishment following last week's win over New Zealand.

Stokes, 33, led England to an impressive eight-wicket victory in Christchurch, with Brydon Carse and debutant Jacob Bethell starring. Although the Test finished a day-and-a-half early, both teams have been sanctioned for slow over rates.
 
Ben Stokes in the 2nd Test against New Zealand declared the 2nd Innings while being on 49*
 
Ben Stokes in the 2nd Test against New Zealand declared the 2nd Innings while being on 49*
Selfless cricketer, incredible captain.

He clearly had a lot going on during the Pakistan series with the injury comeback, rushing to be fit and his house being robbed while his wife and kids were inside.

So many posters wrote him off as finished.

Nice to see him destroy a dominant NZ side in their home and continue with both bat and ball as well as the usual brilliant captaincy, strategising and man management.
 
England captain Ben Stokes has admitted he put "too much emphasis" on next year's Ashes in Australia and will now be "toning down expectations"

At the beginning of the home summer, Stokes explained an overhaul of his team, including the retirement of James Anderson, was done with the Ashes in mind.

Before they travel down under next November, England have the final Test in New Zealand, a one-off match at home to Zimbabwe in May and a marquee five-Test series hosting India.

"In interviews in the summer and stuff like that a lot was pointed towards the Ashes, which was a long way away," said Stokes.

"You do always have one eye on that but we have six more Tests before that.

"It's just making sure I keep my focus on being in the here and now and what we've got coming up, and when the Ashes is our next series, then we will focus on it."

England start their 17th, and final, Test of 2024 in Hamilton on Saturday (22:00 GMT Friday) with the chance to become only the third visiting side to win a three-match series 3-0 in New Zealand. Just once before, in 2016, have England played 17 Tests in a calendar year.

After a number of players opted to drive north from second-Test venue Wellington, England did not name a team on Thursday and will instead wait until Friday's training session.

Stokes said he expects Harry Brook - the world's new number-one Test batter - to be fit after an ankle problem, but hinted at freshening up the pace-bowling attack.

"Even though we finished early in Wellington it felt like all the overs from the seamers were more than the scorecard because of the weather," he said. "The lads put in tough graft, so we'll see how they pull up."

Source: BBC
 
No ‘holding back’ vows Ben Stokes despite injury problems

England captain Ben Stokes promised there will be no “holding back” when he recovers from his latest injury problems, insisting he is ready to keep digging deep for his country.

Stokes was forced to watch the final stages of his side’s 423-run thrashing by New Zealand in Hamilton from the sidelines, having pulled up with hamstring trouble while bowling his 37th over of the third Test.

He did not appear again, handing the captaincy reins to Ollie Pope in the field and deciding not to bat in a lost cause as England were finished off for 234 – barely a third of the way towards a vast target of 658.

England still took the series 2-1, their first success on these shores since 2008, and the last order of business before they depart is a scan for Stokes at a nearby hospital.

That is familiar territory for the 33-year-old, who badly tore the same left hamstring in August and also had major knee surgery on his left knee little more than a year ago.

His body may be rebelling after more than a decade of going through the wringer of international cricket, but he will not contemplate the notion of reducing his workload or easing up on the intensity he prides himself on.

“Nah, I ain’t holding back,” he said after the conclusion at Seddon Park.

“I was obviously incredibly disappointed walking off the other day, I was very emotional about the whole thing. But you sleep on it, take the emotion out and realise that every time you walk out on the field as an athlete, you’re putting yourself at risk of injury.

“I worked really hard to get myself in a position to play the role I did in this game and it’s just sod’s law that the first time in a while I feel like I’m young again, something happens.”

He continued: “Every setback, I come back stronger. There’s no doubt I’ll be going away from here, working my **** off as I always do and getting myself back to where I was. That’s my job.

"I literally can’t say anything more until I hop in the MRI scanner and wait for the specialist’s report, then we’ll go from there. But we’ve got ages until we meet up as a Test team again.”

Stokes’ previous lay-off saw him miss four consecutive Test matches against Sri Lanka and Pakistan, his first absences since taking over two-and-a-half years ago, but there is now a five-month break from the red-ball game.

Head coach Brendon McCullum is prepared to step in if he feels his leading man ever pushes himself too far, but is willing to accept his risk-taking nature as part of his X factor.

“He takes himself to places that other people aren’t prepared to, that’s what makes him great,” McCullum told BBC’s Test Match Special.

“He pushes boundaries constantly of where he thinks he can take his body. There are times when I’ll probably have to remind him he’s not as young as what he used to be, but I also don’t want to ever take that flair away from him. If you try to chisel off any rough edges of those types of mavericks, you end up with a vanilla product and no one wants that. We want Ben Stokes being the maverick that he is.”

England are ready for a much needed red-ball breather after their breakneck 2024, which they end in credit after nine wins and eight defeats from a bumper 17 Tests.

Letting the last outing of the year slip away by such an imposing margin – their fourth biggest defeat by runs in history – may have left a sour taste, but after taking home the newly-inaugurated Crowe-Thorpe Trophy, Stokes reflected on a job well done.

"We hold our hands up, we’re a much better team than we’ve shown this week. But we came here to beat New Zealand and what we set out to achieve, we’ve achieved,” he said.

“It’s obviously disappointing to end the tour and end the top of year with a loss. I’m very, very happy with our 2024. We’ve had a lot of opportunities given to experienced guys who have showed they have what it takes to deliver match-winning moments at the highest level.”

 
Ben Stokes will skip the Hundred this summer to focus on managing his fitness ahead of England's away Ashes series in Australia.
 

England Test captain Ben Stokes steps up his recovery from hamstring surgery ahead of blockbuster series against India and Australia​


Ben Stokes is stepping up his recovery from injury by joining an England Lions training camp in Abu Dhabi.

England Test captain Stokes, 33, suffered a recurrence of a left hamstring tear in third Test defeat to New Zealand in December, but vowed to come back even stronger, saying: ‘I’ve got so much more left in this tank. There’s a reason I have a Phoenix permanently inked on my body.’

Despite a reputation for ‘ruining himself,’ whenever embarking on a fitness comeback, the ECB’s medical team are said to have been taken aback by his physical appearance during a second rehab in the space of six months, having sustained the injury initially playing in the Hundred last August.

The Lions group currently out in the Gulf is being overseen by head coach Andrew Flintoff and includes his 16-year-old son Rocky Flintoff.

Stokes’ progress suggests he is ahead of schedule in his bid to face Zimbabwe in a one-off Test in Nottingham in May, and he has clearly prioritised England’s matches in a year of Test series against India and Australia by pulling out of the Hundred this summer.

His Durham and Northern Superchargers team-mate Brydon Carse also now has extra time to seek specialist help after Sunrisers Hyderabad ruled him out of the Indian Premier League with an unusual injury.

 

Ben Stokes is a contender for England white-ball captaincy, insists Key​


Rob Key has said he would be “stupid” not to consider Ben Stokes taking on the captaincy of at least one of England’s white-ball teams as he and Brendon McCullum attempt to right the ship after the recent Champions Trophy blowout.

Speaking at Lord’s on Thursday, less than a week since the last of England’s three group stage defeats in Pakistan, the director of men’s cricket held his hands up to “a lot of errors”. There was also an admission the players “do not help themselves” when it comes to shaking off the perception of a team that does not care about winning.

While stressing he is not feeling the pinch as regards his own role, Key and his head coach, McCullum now face a pivotal decision over the best candidate to replace Jos Buttler as white-ball captain. With 11 Tests, 27 white-ball matches and a T20 World Cup in the next 12 months, picking a multi-format player comes with inherent issues.

Much like McCullum last week, Key has insisted “nothing is off the table” which, as well as asking Harry Brook to step up and risk overburdening a player yet to crack all three formats, could even see Stokes in the frame. The 34-year-old is on track to be fit for the season after hamstring surgery but this risks his Ashes project being compromised.

“Ben Stokes is one of the best captains I have ever seen,” said Key. “So it would be stupid not to look at him. It’s just the knock-on effect of what that means.

“He is an unbelievably good tactician, which we’ve seen in Test cricket, but he’s also a leader of men. He is someone who gets the best out of people. He’s someone that, when the pressure is really on, he is able to sort of throw a blanket around the players and actually say: ‘No, no, this is the way forward. Keep going with it.’

“It’s more about, what would that then mean to him? What would that then mean to his workload? We don’t want to risk other things as well. But there’s always a way in England where you start [thinking]: ‘What if it goes wrong?’ You’ve also got to think: ‘What if it goes right?’ And they are the decisions that I have to make.”

 
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