logo
'Winning the Ashes would be Stokes' greatest miracle'

'Winning the Ashes would be Stokes' greatest miracle'

Yahoo2 days ago
Seven runs stood between England and a series victory over India.
Six, really. One sweet connection from Gus Atkinson could have brought the scores level in the final Test. A tie would have been good enough for England.
When the margin is so narrow, what can be learned? Take your catches, don't throw your wicket away after you've made a hundred, try not lose one of your bowlers to a dislocated shoulder. Hardly writing a new coaching manual, is it?
Above all, the nipper at The Oval reinforced what we knew beforehand.
With Ben Stokes in the team, England can beat anyone. Without him, they are vulnerable.
Other teams have to deal with injuries or lack of fitness. India were without Jasprit Bumrah and Rishabh Pant. Then again, the tourists won the two Tests Bumrah did not play and comfortably put away England 4-1 last year without Pant in the team.
"No," was Stokes' simple answer when asked if he had any concerns that England are too reliant on him.
In reality, Stokes is England's beating heart. When he isn't there as the all-action all-rounder, England lose their balance. Without him as captain, they lose his tactical nous and sense of focus. Runs, wickets and fielding. He is the personification of his team. It probably should be called Benball, not Bazball.
One wonders how Stokes, the arch-competitor, coped with watching Monday's finale go down to the wire. England's patron saint of lost causes was the man to engineer their last one-wicket victory in a Test.
Stokesless, England lost. The next time he will be seen on the field, hopefully, will be the first Test against Australia in Perth in November.
England can win the Ashes. They have their best chance of success in Australia since they last won a series down under, back in 2010-11. It is a low bar, mind. In the past 14 years, they have played 15 Tests in Australia, lost 13, drawn two and won none.
That chance to win begins and ends with Ben Stokes. If that sounds like hyperbole, consider this: Of the England squad that travels to Australia, none will have ever tasted victory in a Test down under and as few as five will have played a Test there.
Between them, they will have one Test hundred on Australian soil, and that will belong to Stokes. Of the two bowlers to have a five-wicket haul in Australia, one will be Stokes, the other Mark Wood. If Wood is fit for November, he will not have played a Test in 15 months.
Stokes' task is clear. He needs to recover from a shoulder injury, play like Ian Botham, captain like Mike Brearley, and stay the course. The last part is probably the hardest. He has now not played a full part in any of England's past four Test series because of injuries.
He has history of turning water into wine (or whatever he's drinking these days, after claiming to have cut back on the booze). The 2019 World Cup final, the 2019 Headingley Test. Cape Town, the 2022 T20 World Cup final. The angry hundred at Lord's in 2023, Headingley again the same year. Lord's this year.
If he pulls this off, and gets his hands on the urn in Sydney in January, it really would be his greatest miracle.
'England and India provide most intense, dramatic and emotional finale'
England-India Test series best since 2005 Ashes - Agnew
Who pressed their Ashes case? Who disappointed? England's player ratings
Support will come from Joe Root, Harry Brook and Ben Duckett. It is time for Zak Crawley and Ollie Pope to emphatically deliver on the patience they have been afforded. England's batting looks strong, but they are only an injury from Jacob Bethell, who by November might only have played two first-class matches in 11 months. Jamie Smith will have to show better durability than against India, when he faded badly in his first five-Test series as a wicketkeeper-batter.
Who knows which bowlers will have seats on the plane when the music stops. The prospect of Wood partnering with Jofra Archer on a spicy Perth pitch is tantalising, the dream of matching Australia's heavy artillery.
In a best-case scenario, they will be supported by Atkinson, Brydon Carse and Josh Tongue, possibly with space for a tearaway bolter. If England really can get their most dangerous weapons to Australia, then they must be managed properly. There is a balance between starting well and making sure there is enough ammunition for the whole campaign.
For the spinner, the Liam Dawson debate looks to have been put to bed. Ricky Ponting reckons Shoaib Bashir is the closest thing England have to Nathan Lyon. Enough said.
There will be anxiety about England's preparation, or lack of it. They are due to play only one warm-up game before the first Test, against their own Lions team. It is worth remembering England have a habit of winning the first Test of series, and losing the last. Against India, they won the opener for the sixth consecutive series, and lost a fifth finale in six.
The biggest challenge will be shutting out the noise that is already coming from Australia. It will only get louder over the next three months. Lyon, Steve Smith and David Warner have piped up. It's only a matter of time before Kylie Minogue, Ned Kelly and Bluey the dog have their say too.
There is something about this England team that particularly irks the Australians. They cannot fathom the Bazball way. They respect Stokes, but do not rate New Zealander Brendon McCullum. He won one of his 16 Tests against the Aussies, and fluffed his lines in the 2015 World Cup final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
However, the Australian public can be quick to turn on their own. They did in 2010-11.
Australia have questions to answer to over their batting, especially the top three. It currently comprises a fading veteran in Usman Khawaja, a Bazball tribute pick in Sam Konstas and an out-of-position Cameron Green. Beyond that, Smith is the best Ashes batter since Don Bradman, Travis Head is one of the best all-format batters in the world and Alex Carey has recovered from the wobble that followed his 'stumping' of Jonny Bairstow in 2023.
The Aussie super-strength is their bowling, the Four Horsemen of captain Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Lyon.
If the seamers need back-up, they can call on Scott Boland, with a Test bowling average of 16.53, the best of anyone since 1914. Still, in his two Tests against the Bazballers in England in 2023, he returned 2-231.
In short, England have the better batting, Australia the better bowling. Bowlers tend to win series and Australia are at home, so they will start as favourites.
But England have Stokes.
There are 108 days until the first Test in Perth on 21 November. 108 days of worrying about Stokes' shoulder and hearing Glenn McGrath's score prediction. 108 days of figuring out how to work when sleep deprived and turning down Christmas with the in-laws because it clashes with the Boxing Day Test. 108 days of checking Sheffield Shield scores and hoping Archer doesn't slip in the shower. 108 days of wondering whether England can do it.
108 days. Tick, tock.
Get cricket news sent straight to your phone
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tottenham midfielder James Maddison to have surgery on ruptured ACL
Tottenham midfielder James Maddison to have surgery on ruptured ACL

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tottenham midfielder James Maddison to have surgery on ruptured ACL

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — England midfielder James Maddison will undergo surgery for a ruptured ACL, Tottenham said Thursday. Maddison was injured during Spurs' preseason friendly against Newcastle in Seoul. No timeframe was given for his recovery. 'His surgery will take place in the coming days and, following that, James will then begin his rehabilitation with our medical team,' Tottenham said in a statement. 'Everyone at Tottenham Hotspur wishes James a full and speedy recovery." Recovery from ACL surgery can take between 6-12 months, meaning Maddison is likely to miss the majority of the upcoming season, which starts next week. It is the latest blow for the 28-year-old Maddison, who missed last season's Europa League final with a knee injury. "We will be supporting him every step of the way,' Tottenham said. ___ James Robson is at ___ AP soccer: James Robson, The Associated Press

Maddison set to miss most of Spurs season after knee injury
Maddison set to miss most of Spurs season after knee injury

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Maddison set to miss most of Spurs season after knee injury

Tottenham midfielder James Maddison is expected to miss most of the upcoming Premier league season after rupturing an anterior cruciate ligament. The England international missed the end of the 2024/25 campaign with a knee injury but featured in pre-season under new boss Thomas Frank. Maddison collapsed in pain during a 1-1 draw with Newcastle in South Korea on Sunday with no one around him and left the pitch on a stretcher late in the game. Spurs' worst fears have now been confirmed, with the player facing surgery. "We can confirm that James Maddison will undergo surgery for a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his right knee," said a club statement. "The 28-year-old midfielder suffered the injury during our pre-season friendly against Newcastle United on Sunday in Seoul. "His surgery will take place in the coming days and, following that, James will then begin his rehabilitation with our medical team." The news is also a major blow to Maddison's hopes of forcing his way into England boss Thomas Tuchel's selection for next year's World Cup. Tottenham, who won the Europa League last season, face Champions League winners Paris Saint-Germain in the UEFA Super Cup in Italy on August 13 before launching their Premier League campaign against Burnley three days later. jw/kca/ea

Who is Shadrach Ekiugbo? Liverpool's exciting centre-back sensation
Who is Shadrach Ekiugbo? Liverpool's exciting centre-back sensation

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Who is Shadrach Ekiugbo? Liverpool's exciting centre-back sensation

It's time to introduce the next generation at Liverpool and chiefly among them Shadrach Ekiugbo. We've written about the exciting up and coming talent at the academy. The likes of Joshua Abe and Erik Farkas are both U16 players, but they have been promoted to the U18s this summer to continue their development at a higher level. 🔴 Shop the LFC 2025/26 adidas home range 🚨2025/26 LFC x adidas range🚨 LFC x adidas Shop the home range today! LFC x adidas Shop the goalkeeper range today LFC x adidas Shop the new adidas range today! 🔴 Behind them in the same age group is the talented Vincent Joseph, who has been catching the eye not just for Liverpool but for Germany's U15 and U16 side as well. Because of his eligibility for England and Germany, Joseph has been likened to Jamal Musiala. An attacking midfielder, who can make really intelligent runs into the box and score goals, he too, just like Abe and Farkas are worth keeping an eye on. The other player who should be on fans' radar is Ekiugbo. Recently, Liverpool's U16 side travelled to Tokyo, at the same time as the first team. They travelled to play two exhibition matches against the select. Liverpool lost both games (1-0 and 2-0) but there were some promising individual performances. Among the stand-out performers in both games was Ekiugbo. He's a different player to Joseph, Farkas and Abe. Primarily because he is not an attacker but a defender. What stood out about him in the games against the select is his reading of the game and how cool and composed he was. On top of that, he was brilliant on the ball, sending through balls and long passes that broke opposition lines. Ekiugbo was always looking to play the ball forward and instigate attacks. So, it's clear that he's a promising defender. And one name to keep an eye on. It's also important to note that he's been at the academy for a long time. He signed his first contract with the club as an U9 player, just like Abe and Joseph. As per the club's official website, Trent Alexander-Arnold was present on that special day. Ekiugbo has progressed through the ranks impressively ever since. He's now also an England U15 international, making his debut earlier this year against Turkey. In the two games, Ekiugbo caught the eye on both occasions. He played one half in each game and won four out of his six duels, winning eight out of 12 duels in total over the course of just over 90 minutes. He also won two out of three aerial duels and showcased his passing ability completing 45 of his 53 attempted passes and completing two out of three dribble attempts, which are impressive numbers for a centre-back in just 90 minutes. The next step for Ekiugbo is to break into the U18 side and earn that promotion just like Abe and Farkas have. He's got every chance if he continues to perform like he did at international level and in Tokyo.

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