The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Now we can be sure he is England’s most talented left-handed batsman ever

Stokes has the defensive nous of Cook and Edrich, mixed with the attacking stroke-making flair of Gower and Woolley

- By Scyld Berry CHIEF CRICKET WRITER

It is the big stage, and the time for the hero to grab some global attention. Kevin Pietersen sensed that, and Ben Stokes is now filling his boots as England’s super-bat, the one who can do what everyone else cannot.

The first innings of the second Test of a series is when most eyes are watching, or thus Pietersen must have thought. England would usually be 1-0 down after the opening Test, which remains their habit, and the call was for someone to turn the tide.

Pietersen scored nine of his 23 Test centuries in the first innings of the second Test of a series, and most were match-winners, several of them double hundreds. Stokes’s motivation might be slightly different, but if the impact is the same, England will be happy.

Among England’s right-handed batsmen, Pietersen has surely been the most talented in the sense of being able to play the widest range of shots. Stokes (“winning games for England” is his mantra), should now be recognised as England’s most talented left-handed batsman, ever, if he has not been already.

It is a smaller pool, admittedly. Left-handed batsmen were not encouraged in the conformist midvictori­an era when Test cricket began, and the first century for England by a left-hander was not made until 1911-12, but Stokes deserves the palm after the addition of patience completed his repertoire.

He can defend as well as any of England’s dogged left-handers have done, like Sir Alastair Cook, John Edrich or Graham Thorpe. He did it in the first half of his Headingley masterpiec­e last summer, and he did it again at Old Trafford to manoeuvre England into position on day one with Dom Sibley. Has any English left-hander been so watertight at the start of his innings?

And Stokes can attack as brilliantl­y as any of England’s left-handed strokemake­rs ever has, whether David

Gower or Frank Woolley, the maker of that century in

1911-12, and neither of them could reverse-sweep spin as Stokes did to post three figures – or reverse-sweep pace bowlers as Stokes tried to do when he finally got himself out for his second-highest Test score.

Stokes has the strokes of a batsman who has scored a hundred in the Indian Premier League; who has scored 258 against South Africa from only 198 balls; who scored 74 off 45 balls at the climax of the last Headingley Test.

But the secret of his latest innings was that he reined himself in, left the ball a lot, waited for the full-length ball, then drilled it in the V between mid-on and mid-off, or once over mid-on.

A high backlift, strong wrists, an astute cricket brain and the capacity to play straight if not always the willingnes­s to do so in the past: it is a wonder this was only his 10th century in his seven-year Test career. The first came in his second Test, in Perth, when he made England’s only century of that spectacula­rly unsuccessf­ul series; when he looked not only Mitchell Johnson and Ryan Harris in the eye but the cracks in the Waca pitch, and delivered a century of supreme orthodoxy. That is the essence of Stokes.

His bowling is a bit rough and ready, yet his batting is orthodoxy itself. He is not only the best lefthander England have had but the most classicall­y correct. So why was Stokes’s Test average no more than 36 before this game, now nudged up to 37 – still the domain of the good, not great? Because he is so selfless and has never given a hoot for his own statistics. To certain English batsmen through the ages, red ink has been irresistib­le. Once in a Test in Sharjah Stokes ruptured himself and batted down at No10 in his second innings: a golden opportunit­y for a neat not-out.

Instead, he launched himself at the target – England needed more than 100 with only James Anderson to come – and got stumped. How many would Stokes have scored on England’s last Ashes tour, had he not been banned for that nightclub incident? And how many will he score in 18 months’ time, in his batting prime, aged 30?

If Jofra Archer is by then being given the first over instead of Anderson or Stuart Broad, and Stokes the batsman keeps progressin­g from good to great to the best ever and beyond, England have a chance.

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