Stokes won’t back down against Australians in Ashes
LONDON: England all-rounder Ben Stokes has promised not to take a backward step when he faces Australia again in the upcoming Ashes series.There has been speculation Australia will try to get under the skin of the feisty Stokes, who appeared decidedly unimpressed when ‘saluted’ off the field by West Indies’
By our correspondents
July 03, 2015
LONDON: England all-rounder Ben Stokes has promised not to take a backward step when he faces Australia again in the upcoming Ashes series.
There has been speculation Australia will try to get under the skin of the feisty Stokes, who appeared decidedly unimpressed when ‘saluted’ off the field by West Indies’ Marlon Samuels during England’s drawn series in the Caribbean earlier this year.
But amid all the talk of whether the Ashes, which begin with next week’s first Test in Cardiff, will be blighted by ‘sledging’ or verbal abuse of opposition players, Stokes said he was ready for whatever came his way.
“I’m definitely expecting there to be some feuds out on the pitch,” Stokes said at an event staged by series sponsors Investec in London on Thursday.
“I don’t go looking for it, but if someone comes at you on the pitch in the heat of the moment and the adrenaline is going then no one in this squad is one to shy away from it,” he added.
“We all have different ways of handling it. Some guys walk away from it and don’t get involved but I’ll look them in the eye and probably say something.
“I think it’s a strength of mine. Being in a battle, you don’t want to be the loser. I don’t want to take a backward step and let them know they are on top of me, or that they can say what they want and get away with it.”
Stokes, a 24-year-old seam-bowling all-rounder and son of former Kiwi rugby league international Ged Stokes, scored a dynamic hundred during England’s First Test victory over New Zealand earlier in the season.
He also provided one of the few England highlights as they were thrashed 5-0 during the last Ashes series in Australia, in 2013/14, with a defiant 120 in the Third Test in Perth.
Stokes said the attacking way England had played in their recent 3-2 One-day International series win over New Zealand, beaten by Australia in this year’s World Cup final, would serve them well in the Ashes despite the change of format.
“My Ashes memories are not too good but we are taking a lot of confidence into this series,” Stokes said of an England team that will, for the first time, be coached by an Australian in Trevor Bayliss.
“We want to carry on the good form that we have strung together.
“One-day cricket is now coming into Test cricket — strike rates are up to 60 or 70 (runs per 100 balls).”
There has been speculation Australia will try to get under the skin of the feisty Stokes, who appeared decidedly unimpressed when ‘saluted’ off the field by West Indies’ Marlon Samuels during England’s drawn series in the Caribbean earlier this year.
But amid all the talk of whether the Ashes, which begin with next week’s first Test in Cardiff, will be blighted by ‘sledging’ or verbal abuse of opposition players, Stokes said he was ready for whatever came his way.
“I’m definitely expecting there to be some feuds out on the pitch,” Stokes said at an event staged by series sponsors Investec in London on Thursday.
“I don’t go looking for it, but if someone comes at you on the pitch in the heat of the moment and the adrenaline is going then no one in this squad is one to shy away from it,” he added.
“We all have different ways of handling it. Some guys walk away from it and don’t get involved but I’ll look them in the eye and probably say something.
“I think it’s a strength of mine. Being in a battle, you don’t want to be the loser. I don’t want to take a backward step and let them know they are on top of me, or that they can say what they want and get away with it.”
Stokes, a 24-year-old seam-bowling all-rounder and son of former Kiwi rugby league international Ged Stokes, scored a dynamic hundred during England’s First Test victory over New Zealand earlier in the season.
He also provided one of the few England highlights as they were thrashed 5-0 during the last Ashes series in Australia, in 2013/14, with a defiant 120 in the Third Test in Perth.
Stokes said the attacking way England had played in their recent 3-2 One-day International series win over New Zealand, beaten by Australia in this year’s World Cup final, would serve them well in the Ashes despite the change of format.
“My Ashes memories are not too good but we are taking a lot of confidence into this series,” Stokes said of an England team that will, for the first time, be coached by an Australian in Trevor Bayliss.
“We want to carry on the good form that we have strung together.
“One-day cricket is now coming into Test cricket — strike rates are up to 60 or 70 (runs per 100 balls).”
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