The Guardian Australia

England’s Ben Stokes and Alex Hales still on good terms after court claims

- Ali Martin

Ben Stokes and Alex Hales have a protracted wait to learn if they face any cricketing sanctions but there is understood to be no ill-feeling between the pair after a potentiall­y divisive end to the Bristol court case in which the former was cleared of affray.

Stokes’s counsel, Gordon Cole QC, had used his closing speech on Monday to suggest that possible kicks to the head of Ryan Ali from Hales during the early-hours fight on 25 September may have been the cause of the co-defendant’s fractured eye socket.

Speaking after Stokes and Ali were acquitted, Mr Cole said that “the evidence of Alex Hales’s involvemen­t may have made a difference to the jury”. The England one-day batsman was not charged for his involvemen­t, something queried by Stephen Mooney, barrister for the subsequent­ly cleared co-defendant Ryan Hale, while the jury was out.

Though this late manoeuvre by Cole to highlight the actions of Hales is said to have been made without the prior knowledge of Stokes, it could in theory have caused issues down the line between two regulars in an England 50-over squad that, under Eoin Morgan’s captaincy, is looking to win the World Cup on home soil next summer.

Sources close to Hales insist, however, that while the past fortnight has been a time of stress and a significan­t wake-up call over future behaviour it will not fester as both cricketers look to get on with their careers. The pair are still due to face the Cricket Discipline Commission, though, and a possible charge of bringing the game into disrepute now that criminal proceeding­s have been completed.

There is no date set for the process – while the CDC commission­er, Tim O’Gorman, has yet to confirm his panel – and it could be weeks before all parties are able to convene. In the meantime Stokes has been cleared to play in the third Test with India at Trent Bridge, which starts on Saturday, after missing the innings victory at Lord’s that put England 2-0 up.

Trevor Bayliss is due to speak before his return to training on Thursday – the England head coach does not normally give a media conference two days before a match – and, as a selector, will be expected to explain why Stokes has returned so soon with the CDC hearing pending and also field questions on the team culture for which he is ultimately responsibl­e.

The all-rounder’s return in New Zealand in February, having sat out the tour of Australia, did not affect dressing-room harmony. Indeed the 27-yearold remains a hugely popular teammate despite the events in Bristol resulting in increased scrutiny of the team’s off-field conduct during their failed Ashes campaign.

England will need to assess the match fitness of Stokes this week following 10 days of inactivity and there remains a tricky conversati­on to be had over who potentiall­y misses out with his fellow all-rounders Sam Curran and Chris Woakes picking up the awards for man of the match at Edgbaston and Lord’s respective­ly.

Jos Buttler, who batted in Stokes’s regular No 6 position at Lord’s, is yet to fire with the bat in this series but has only recently moved to second slip. Further disruption to the cordon would be a concern, while Buttler has also been made vice-captain for the series – the position from which Stokes was removed last year post-Bristol.

Hales is not part of the Test squad and will therefore not share a dressing room with Stokes this week. Their next assignment together is not until the limited-overs leg of the England tour to Sri Lanka in October, provided the CDC does not hand down additional suspension­s on top of matches already missed in the past year.

This Friday Hales’s Nottingham­shire side face a crunch final group match away against Yorkshire in the Twenty20 Blast that will likely see only the winning county progress to the quarter-finals. Should the defending champions, Notts, miss out it would effectivel­y end his season as he is currently a white-ball specialist.

That said, there is interest in Hales from three teams in the ongoing Caribbean Premier League as a possible signing. Jamaica Tallawahs, St Lucia Zouks and Barbados Tridents are all monitoring the situation, with the latter expected to have a berth on their roster freed up with Steve Smith, the former Australia captain, expected to depart early.

The CPL runs until the 16 September final and should Nottingham­shire progress to the Blast quarterfin­als – which take place from 23 to 26 August, before the Finals Day on 15 September – there may even be scope for the right-hander to fit in a short spell.

Nottingham­shire had hoped to persuade Hales to resume his red-ball career for the end of their County Championsh­ip campaign after Quinton de Kock was pulled out of a late stint as their overseas player by South Africa. The club have since moved to sign Kraigg Brathwaite, the West Indies opener, for the remainder of the season.

 ?? Photograph: Simon Cooper/PA ?? Alex Hales’s next potential assignment alongside Ben Stokes will be England’s one-day series in Sri Lanka.
Photograph: Simon Cooper/PA Alex Hales’s next potential assignment alongside Ben Stokes will be England’s one-day series in Sri Lanka.

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