
Stokes ready to deal with increased workload despite feeling sore all over
The England captain struggled with cramp in his left leg and was feeling his shoulder as the hosts failed to bowl India out in their second innings at Old Trafford on Sunday and had to settle for a fourth test draw.
Stokes took his first five-wicket haul for eight years in India's first innings, an impressive feat given his recent injury issues.
"It's just a workload sort of thing," Stokes told reporters after the draw with India left England leading 2-1 in the five-match series.
"We got a fair amount of overs and everything starts creeping up on you. I'll keep trying, keep going and as I say to all the bowlers: pain is just an emotion.
"I'll always try to run through a brick wall for the team."
Stokes revealed he had hurt his bicep tendon, with his injury niggles the result of a taxing workload that has seen him already send down 140 overs in four tests – the most he has ever bowled in a series.
However, Stokes, the leading wicket-taker of the series, is optimistic of taking to the field at the Oval on Thursday as England try to seal a 3-1 series triumph.
"Hopefully I will be alright going for the last one," he said. "I am doing everything possible to be alright. It's been a big five or six weeks, I'll always try to give everything I possibly can.
"I don't want to eat my words, but the likelihood I won't play is very unlikely."
India showed great character to battle to an unexpected draw, given they are a young team. Shubman Gill, 25, is playing his first test series as captain following the retirements of Indian greats Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin.
Coach Gautam Gambhir reserved special praise for his skipper, who became only the third captain to score four hundreds in a single test series to help his side salvage a draw.
"These are characters who are sat in the dressing room wanting to fight for their country," Gambhir told reporters.
"I don't believe in something like transition. It is still an Indian team. It is only experience and inexperience. Being under pressure, batting five sessions against an attack like England, will do so much for them.
"An important thing is he (Gill) is living up to his expectations and his talent. When he goes into bat, he goes in as a batsman, not a captain." — REUTERS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
Cricket-New Zealand take 49-run lead over Zimbabwe with nine wickets in hand
(Reuters) -New Zealand did not take long to gain the upper hand over Zimbabwe on the first day of the second test, skittling out their hosts for 125 before reaching 174-1in reply in Bulawayo on Thursday. Opener Devon Conway (79) and nightwatchman Jacob Duffy (8) were unbeaten at stumps as New Zealand led by 49 runs. Conway and Will Young put on 162 for the first wicket before Young chopped on a delivery from Trevor Gwandu to be bowled for 74 just before the close. Matt Henry, man of the match in New Zealand's comprehensive first test win, bagged another five-wicket haul with 5-40 in 15 overs while debutant Zakary Foulkes took 4-38 after Zimbabwe won the toss. Brendan Taylor top scored for Zimbabwe with 44, falling just when he looked on course for a successful return to the team at the age of 39. He was back after serving a three-and-a-half-year ban for breaching anti-corruption and anti-doping rules and before the match spoke of overcoming alcohol and drug addiction to revive his test career, which began 21 years ago. "How good is it that three years ago, I couldn't get out of bed and now I am here doing what I love, and that's representing Zimbabwe?" Taylor said in an emotional television interview before the first day's play. "I was in the dark depths of the abyss and trying to just get through this total and incomprehensible demoralisation of life. It was incredibly difficult." He was the fifth Zimbabwe wicket to fall when a ball from Henry looked to stand up on him and he steered an easy catch to Mitchell Santner at extra cover. Wicketkeeper Tafadzwa Tsiga made the only other significant contribution with an unbeaten 33. Fast bowler Foulkes was one of three debutants for the Kiwis, whose captain Tom Latham failed a fitness test on a shoulder injury, with Santner deputising for a second successive match. New Zealand won last week's first test, also at the Queens Sports Club, by nine wickets. (Writing by Mark Gleeson in Cape Town; Editing by Ed Osmond)


The Sun
6 hours ago
- The Sun
Indian Super League clubs meet to salvage football tournament future
NEW DELHI: Indian Super League clubs held urgent talks with football authorities on Thursday to rescue the country's top competition from potential collapse. The tournament faces uncertainty due to an unresolved rights agreement between the All India Football Federation and commercial partner Football Sports Development Limited. The current deal expires on December 8 with no renewal finalised, creating chaos just weeks before the usual September-April season. Three clubs including former champions Bengaluru FC have stopped paying player and staff salaries amid the uncertainty. Pre-season preparations remain on hold across the league as stakeholders scramble for solutions. AIFF president Kalyan Chaubey remained hopeful after meeting representatives from all 13 ISL clubs in New Delhi. 'We are hoping to have ISL this season, though it may be a bit late,' Chaubey told reporters. The federation proposed potential format changes to salvage the tournament despite the delayed start. Renewal negotiations for the 2010 agreement stalled after India's Supreme Court intervened in a separate case involving AIFF's constitution. The impasse has left over 5,000 players, coaches and staff in limbo with no clear path forward. Chaubey confirmed another round of club meetings would occur soon to find practical solutions. Regarding unpaid salaries, the AIFF chief stated 'AIFF is not going to interfere in how clubs operate'. Launched in 2014 with star signings like Alessandro Del Piero, the ISL now battles declining viewership and sponsor withdrawals. The league's troubles reflect wider challenges facing Indian football despite earlier optimism about its growth potential. - AFP


The Star
6 hours ago
- The Star
Athletics-Ingebrigtsen set to miss Diamond League meetings in Poland, Belgium
(Reuters) -Olympic 5,000 metres champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen is set to miss this month's Diamond League meetings in Poland and Belgium as he recovers from injury, his spokesperson said on Wednesday. The 24-year-old Norwegian had been scheduled to run the 1500 metres in Brussels on August 22 and was also listed for the Silesia meeting in Poland on August 16, having been announced for the event as early as December last year. Ingebrigtsen has struggled with an Achilles injury over the last few months and had to drop out of the Ostrava Golden Spike and Oslo Bislett Games in June. "He is still working on getting rid of the injury he has sustained to an Achilles. Unfortunately. He would very much have liked to be able to participate," Ingebrigtsen's spokesperson Espen Skoland told Norwegian TV2. Ingebrigtsen has not competed since claiming double gold in the 1500m and 3,000m at the World Indoor Championships in March. He has spent recent weeks training in St. Moritz, where his camp say he is making steady progress. No revised timeline has been given for a return to competition, but Ingebrigtsen has said his goal is to compete at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo in September. (Reporting by Shifa Jahan in Bengaluru and Tommy Lund in Gdansk; Editing by Ken Ferris)