
England fear Chris Woakes will miss Ashes after suffering dislocated shoulder
He immediately looked in serious trouble and after assessing the problem overnight England ruled him out of the remaining four days. The PA news agency understands their concerns run much deeper than that, though, and it is not impossible that the 36-year-old all-rounder has played his last Test.
Chris Woakes is currently off the field after sustaining a suspected shoulder injury while diving for the ball by the boundary.
Wishing you all the best, Woakesy 👊 pic.twitter.com/4Hhf0iZyIB
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 31, 2025
It is not yet known whether surgery is required but if that is the case he could be facing a lay-off of between four and six months, ending any chance of making the trip to Australia.
That would mean he will be 37 by the time he is next available for Test cricket and the selectors may well be ready to look elsewhere. In the nearer term, should Woakes not make the trip Down Under, there could be fresh hope for Sam Cook and Matthew Potts, two seamers who have fallen down the pecking order this summer.
England left some wriggle room for Woakes to bat if absolutely required over the coming days, suggesting he will remain with the team for observation, but it is hard to imagine him being asked to do so in anything short of an emergency.
A team spokesperson said: 'England seamer Chris Woakes will continue to be monitored throughout the remainder of the fifth Rothesay Test at the Kia Oval, following a left shoulder injury sustained on day one of the match against India.
'At this stage, the injury has ruled him out of any further participation in the Test. A further assessment will be conducted at the conclusion of the series.'

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South Wales Argus
an hour ago
- South Wales Argus
Chris Woakes ‘all in' and will bat with dislocated shoulder if needed
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Daily Mirror
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The Guardian
an hour ago
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OK. Who angered the gods? Cricket gods. Weather gods. Sport gods. All the gods. Because quite clearly, the gods, well, the gods are clearly deeply annoyed. As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods of fifth-day stewarding costs. They lead us on, whiz us into a frenzy, and drag us back the next day for their sport. It felt fitting in the end that England and India will get to face one another on the 25th of 25 days in this brain-manglingly fine Test series, played out now by two teams operating on fumes, caffeine, ship's biscuits and blood‑sodden socks. Everyone was winning this game and simultaneously losing it by the time England and India were called from the field at 5.29pm, first by bad light and then a squall of rain. England need 35 runs, India four wickets, one of those the single swishing arm of the injured Chris Woakes. 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Victory would probably nudge it up as the greatest on this ground in the modern age, or at least up there with Kevin Pietersen's 153 20 years ago against an all-time Australian attack. For now the best way to look at Brook's innings is to start with the key moment. Not the hundred itself, celebrated with a huge warm wave of noise from an utterly rapt Oval crowd. Instead the moment to remember on a deeply hallucinogenic fourth day arrived half an hour before lunch, in a game that history, gravity and the scorecard suggested England were losing. At which point Brook walked out of his crease and hit Akash Deep over cover for six. This wasn't just an impossible shot, but an act of pure gangsterism. Brook was on eight off 18 balls at the start of the over. England were 126 for three and paddling. Johan Cruyff said that when he was playing badly he used to just smash into someone, start a row, upset the day. This is not far from what Brook does when the adrenaline jab is required. Here it came with a moment of space age skill and precision, all hands, eyes, easy grace, and somehow a kind of carelessness too, like a man swatting an apple over a tennis court with a walking stick. It is hard to overstate the brilliance of being able to do this, but also choosing to do it at that moment. This is hoodlum cricket. It's turning up to the Brits with a fake Uzi in your pocket. It's Cherringtony Soprano. It is talent from another place. And it is entirely logical, too. If you can play that shot, you have a duty to do so. The moment will exist now, a collage of intent, shapes, lines, discarded conventions. It's timing was cold-eyed too. At that moment England were losing. Ben Duckett had battled hard, prodding and swishing and looking, as ever like Paddington bravely facing down the new ball. Ollie Pope had come and gone, trying to hit everything through square leg, an elite player with an obviously flawed technique. 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 And so, with the day closing in, Brook happened. A little later he hooked Deep into the hands of Mohammed Siraj just over the rope in front of the groundsman's shed. There were pulls and glides and wallops, Brook seeing the ball like a single still point of light. He walked off at lunch to a huge, dizzy roar, 38 off 30, and the game broken open. This is shock and awe batting. England plan for this, choose the moment to shift the energy. It seems fitting that Brook, the Sedberg scholarship boy, but also a man from a different pathway, should be the spirit animal of this style. His entire game is contained in that easy swing, the perfect hands, the clarity of his eye. The best players are always orthodox, but with shapes that are their own, that express some note of their own character and physicality. 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