
England bowler Brydon Carse: I considered amputation of my troublesome toe
Carse has battled against longstanding problems with his left foot, with the force produced by charging through his action, opening up a painful wound on his second toe.
The damage became so bad over a breakthrough winter with the national team that he was forced to pull out midway through England's Champions Trophy campaign in Pakistan and withdraw from a lucrative deal in the Indian Premier League.
The 29-year-old explored every option to deal with the issue, eventually going as far as contemplating a grisly response.
Ben Stokes' late father Ged famously took a similar course of action in his rugby league days, removing his middle finger at the knuckle to speed up his return to action, but Carse was cautioned against following suit by team medics.
Speaking ahead of England's first T20 against the West Indies at his home ground of Durham, Carse said: 'For a number of years now, my feet are not the most ideal thing.
'It ended up being quite a severe wound I was playing with for the majority of the winter, it got infected a couple of times.
'It is a bit running joke in changing room, my second toe. So we came up with the thought, 'can we just get rid of the second toe'?
'Everyone has had their opinion on my second toe. At one stage I was going to bed thinking 'I could actually do this, I think I could get rid of my second toe' but then the medical staff said you need it for balance so that was quickly ruled out.
'I'm going to have to keep it a little bit longer.'
As for alternative solutions, he was able to pick up some less invasive suggestions which have coupled with an extended break between February and May to get him back at full tilt.
JUST IN: England name their squad for the first Test against India in Leeds 🏴
Jamie Overton has been called up for the first time since his debut against New Zealand in 2022.
Jacob Bethell, Chris Woakes and Brydon Carse are all back after missing the Zimbabwe Test pic.twitter.com/QJiSGyvc3I
— ESPNcricinfo (@ESPNcricinfo) June 5, 2025
Increasingly viewed as a first-choice across all formats – he is set to play for England in one-day internationals, T20s and Test cricket this month alone – his body will be pushed to the limit.
'I'm in a bit of routine at the minute and things seem to be working well, so fingers crossed everything goes fine,' he said.
'It's probably a few different things I've slightly changed now. I've gone into a narrower boot, positioned the hole in my boot slightly differently and got new insoles, which is all the information the specialists have given me over the winter.
'I think playing through all three formats is a challenge for anyone. As we work through the summer I'm going to have to look after myself and those are always ongoing conversations but we've got an incredible support structure and medical staff.
'Every time I pull on an England shirt, I'm going to want to give 100 per cent.'
England have made one change to their squad for the 20-over series, which continues in Bristol on Sunday and moves to Southampton on Tuesday.
Phil Salt has been stood down for paternity leave, having welcomed his first child just prior to winning the IPL with Royal Challengers Bangalore at the weekend.
Jamie Smith takes his place at opener, allowing him to continue where he left off with a fiery knock of 64 from 28 balls in the final match of England's one-day whitewash over the tourists.

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The Sun
12 hours ago
- The Sun
‘I could actually do this' – England cricket star reveals he seriously considered AMPUTATING injured toe
BRYDON CARSE was so worried about his toe injury that he considered AMPUTATION. Durham fast bowler Carse revealed: 'At one stage, I was going to bed thinking, 'I could actually do this - I could get rid of my second toe.' 2 2 'But the medical staff said I need the toe for my balance so it was quickly ruled out. 'I'm going to have to keep it a little longer.' The impact of Carse's bowling has caused problems with his left foot for several years but it became so bad last winter that he pulled out of the Champions Trophy and the IPL. He is back now and playing in the white-ball matches against West Indies. The T20 series starts this evening on his home ground at Chester-le-Street. He will also be a key man in the Test series against India. Carse, 29, added: 'My feet are not the most ideal thing. 'Everyone has an opinion on my second toe. JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET £50 BONUS 'In the winter, it ended up being quite a severe wound and I got a couple of infections. 'I've changed a few things - I have a narrower boot and new insoles. England cricket stars forced to arrive to West Indies Test match on lime bikes amid 'shambles' at The Oval 'They're working well at the moment.' Ben Stokes ' late father Ged famously had his middle finger removed to the knuckle to prolong his rugby league career. Stokes waves his finger in the air every time he scores a century. Meanwhile, Phil Salt has been granted paternity leave to miss the three T20 matches even though he returned to India immediately after the birth for Sunday's IPL final. He is replaced by Jamie Smith, Player of the Match in the final win of England's 50-over clean sweep.


The Independent
13 hours ago
- The Independent
Top cricket official among four arrested over deadly stadium crush in India
Indian authorities have arrested four people, including the top marketing official of a cricket team, over the deaths in a stampede in the southern city of Bengaluru where the celebration of a match victory turned fatal. At least 11 people died and 56 were seriously wounded on Wednesday when a crowd of tens of thousands of fans swelled outside the Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru and grew unmanageable, leading to a crush. The celebrations for the Indian Premier League title's winner Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), which has been a runner up at least three times before and a fan-favourite, took a deadly turn within minutes. Locals said it was allegedly announced free entry would be permitted for the celebration in the stadium, causing the crowd to surge. Police officials said a top marketing official of RCB, Nikhil Sosale, was among those arrested. He was arrested from Bengaluru's Kempegowda International Airport on Friday around 6.30am when he was on his way to board a flight to Mumbai. His arrest comes after the Karnataka police filed a First Information Report (FIR), often the first step in any police investigation in India, against the winning team, an event management firm and the Karnataka State Cricket Administration (KSCA) under various sections of Indian law, including culpable homicide, voluntarily causing hurt, and unlawful assembly, among several others. The FIR stated that the state police had denied permission to hold the celebration. Mr Sosala also approached the Karnataka High Court, objecting to the manner in which he was arrested, calling the method illegal, arbitrary, and violative of his fundamental rights. He added that the arrest was made on the instructions of state chief minister Siddaramaiah without even the police carrying out a preliminary inquiry. Police officials said the arrests were made in an overnight operation by the Central Crime Branch and the accused are likely to be sent to the Crime Investigation Department on Friday. Naseer Ahmed, political secretary for the Karnataka chief minister, told broadcaster NDTV the crowd became uncontrollable and authorities were unable to make proper arrangements. Chief minister Siddaramaiah said the fans of the team superseded the authorities' estimates. "At a time of celebration, this unfortunate event should not have happened. We are saddened by this. The fans that showed up were beyond our expectations," he said. Thousands of people, some waving the home team's red flag, had lined streets around the Chinnaswamy Stadium as the players arrived in a bus in the evening, TV channels showed, with some climbing trees and the stadium wall for a better view. One policeman carried an injured spectator to an ambulance, while people gathered around another lying seemingly unconscious on the ground.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
England cricketer opens up on why he almost had his toe AMPUTATED in bid to end injury hell... before doctors advised him against drastic move
Brydon Carse considered having a toe amputated last winter to end a six-month injury ordeal. Unable to prevent a wound worsening whenever he bowled — even stitches applied prior to the Champions Trophy in Pakistan burst — the England fast bowler was ready to take drastic action on his left 'pointer', the one next to the big toe. Ben Stokes 's late father Ged famously had a finger end taken off to continue playing professional rugby league in the 1980s and Carse's problematic toe was lined up for similar treatment after it became the talk of the England dressing room. 'People were pretty forward with their opinions about getting it removed and at one stage I was going to bed thinking, 'I could actually do this', but then the medical staff told me that I needed my second toe for balance, so that was ruled out,' said Carse, ahead of Friday's first Twenty20 international between England and West Indies at his home ground of Chester-le-Street. Plastic surgery was also discounted, with doctors advising the best cure for an issue that mushroomed from a fairly routine cut last September was a lengthy period of rest. 'The cut led into a wound and that led into the wound becoming infected a couple of times, and for about six to eight weeks I was on three or four different courses of antibiotics,' Carse recalled. 'Eventually the wound was that deep it ultimately needed a period of time just to heal and close up. Fingers crossed, everything that we've done (recently) seems to be working.' Those things include switching to a narrower bowling boot and wearing new insoles, raising his heel arch and reducing some of the pressure when his foot hits the pitch in his delivery stride. The 29-year-old missed the innings win against Zimbabwe last month but, on Thursday, he was named in England's 14-man squad to face India in the first Test at Headingley. There was also a surprise recall for Jamie Overton, whose only Test appearance to date came three years ago in Leeds when he struck 97 from No 8 to help England beat New Zealand. The 31-year-old has a broken little finger, but will act as back-up to an attack missing the injured Gus Atkinson. Essex's Sam Cook edged out Matt Potts after debuting against Zimbabwe, while Chris Woakes and Josh Tongue will build up their bowling loads ahead of the series opener on June 20 by featuring for England Lions against India A this week. There is even optimism within the camp that Jofra Archer could join the fray for the second Test at Edgbaston on July 2, should the paceman come through Sussex's County Championship fixture against Durham this month unscathed. Jacob Bethell's return gives the selectors a tricky call at the top of the order. Only two of Bethell, Zak Crawley and Ollie Pope will begin the five-match series. Jacob Bethell continues to give England selectors a headache ahead of the Tests against India Phil Salt will miss the three T20 contests against West Indies on paternity leave, with Jamie Smith replacing him. First T20 v West Indies Starts 6.30pm, Chester-le-Street.